Epidemiology, Risk Factors and Measures for Preventing Drowning in Africa: A Systematic Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Methods
2.1. Literature Search
2.2. Eligibility Criteria
2.3. Data Extraction
2.4. Quality of Methods Assessment
2.5. Data Synthesis
3. Results
3.1. Epidemiology of Drowning in Africa
3.2. Drowning Rates in Africa
3.3. Potential Risk Factors
3.4. Prevention Strategies
3.5. Methodological Quality Assessment
4. Discussion
4.1. Implications for Policy and Future Research
4.2. Strengths and Limitations
5. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Authors, Reference, Year | Country | Study Design | Year | Study Population | Rates and Proportion of Drowning |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Davis and Smith, 1982 [23] | South Africa (Cape Town) | Descriptive cross-sectional study | 1979–1981 (3 years) | 1,500,000 people (population in Cape Town) | 285 (0.019%) drowning deaths § |
Grainger 1985 [60] | Seychelles | Descriptive cross-sectional study | 1959–1978 (20 years) | 119 drowning deaths | 5.95 ± 2.2 drownings per year (mean drowning rate) |
Davis and Smith 1985 [24] | South Africa (Cape Town) | Descriptive cross-sectional study | 1980–1983 (4 years) | 1,600,000 people (population in Cape town) | Male: 38.7/100,000 |
Female: 8.3/100,000 | |||||
Meel BL, 2008 [27] | South Africa (Mthatha) | Descriptive cross-sectional study | 1993–2004 (12 years) | 400,000 people (population in Mthatha) | Mean drowning rate: 7.1/100,000 |
Seleye-Fubara et al., 2012 [50] | Nigeria (Niger-delta region) | Descriptive cross-sectional study | 1998–2009 (12 years) | 85 drowning deaths | 80% were unintentional drowning |
Donson and Nickerk, 2013 [25] | South Africa | Descriptive cross-sectional study | 2001–2005 (5 years) | Total population in five cities (Johannesburg, Durban, Cape Town, Port Elizabeth and Pretoria) | 2.1/100,000 |
Joanknecht et al., 2015 [30] | South Africa: Cape Town | Descriptive cross-sectional study | 2007–2013 (6 years) | 75 children admitted for a submersion incident (near drowning and drowning) | 10.7% of the study population drowned |
Lin et al., 2015 [22] | Egypt South Africa | Ecological study | 2009–2011 (3 years) 2007–2009 (3 years) | Entire population in the country Entire population in the country | 1.5/100,000 2.5/100,000 |
Morris et al., 2016 [26] | South Africa (Pretoria) | Descriptive cross-sectional study | 2002–2011 | 23,050 registered deaths 278 deaths due to external causes | 1.2% (278) of the deaths were due to drowning |
Kobusingye et al., 2017 [54] ‡ | Uganda (Buikwe; Kampala; Mukono; Wakiso) | Mixed methods: Quantitative—Cross-sectional ǂ | Not stated | 2804 people (population in the community) | 502/100,000 |
Wu et al., 2017 [21] | Egypt South Africa | Ecological study | 2000 and 2013 | WHO world standard population WHO world standard population | Unintentional drowning rate 2000: 3.89/100,000 2013: 2.93/100,000 2000: 0.33/100,000 2013: 3.38/100,000 |
Saunders et al., 2018 [43] | South Africa (Western Cape) | Descriptive cross-sectional | 2010–2016 (6 years) | Total population in Western Cape (not stated by the authors) | 3.2/100,000 |
Authors, Reference, Year | Country | Study Design | Year | Study Population | Rates and Proportion of Drowning |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Chitiyo 1974 [61] | Zimbabwe (Bulawayo area) | Descriptive cross-sectional study | 1972 | 188 adult deaths (external causes) | 11.17% (21) drowning deaths |
Knobel et al., 1984 [28] | South Africa | Descriptive cross-sectional study | 1966–1981 (15 years) | 3248 children < 15 years (external causes) | 356 drowning deaths (11%) |
Kibel et al., 1990 [31] | South Africa | Descriptive cross-sectional study | 1981–1985 (5 years) | 14,118 children under 15 years of age (deaths due to external causes) | 19% of all injury related deaths |
Flisher et al., 1992 [42] | South Africa | Descriptive cross-sectional study | 1984–1986 (3 years) | 9288 adolescent deaths due to external causes | 10.8% of all deaths due to external causes |
Lerer et al., 1997 [32] | South Africa (Cape Town) | Descriptive cross-sectional | 1994 (1 year) | 3690 deaths due to external causes | 2.6% (96) of all non-natural mortality was due to drowning |
Kobusingye et al., 2001 [55] | Uganda (Mukono district) | Descriptive cross-sectional | 1993–1998 (5 years) | 34 fatal injuries (external causes) | 27% (9) of fatal injuries were due to drowning |
Moshiro et al., 2001 [59] | Tanzania | Descriptive cross-sectional study | 1992–1998 (6 years) | 64,756 persons in Dr es Salaam | Overall drowning incidence not stated |
146,359 (population in Hai) | Female drowning rates/100,000 | ||||
103,053 (population in Morogoro) | Dar es Salaam: 4.7 | ||||
1478 deaths due to injuries (external causes) all age groups | Hai District: 5.5 | ||||
Morogoro: 5.1 | |||||
Male drowning rates/ 100,000 | |||||
Dar es Salaam: 9.2 | |||||
Hai District: 10.2 | |||||
Morogoro: 7.9 | |||||
Lett et al., 2006 [53] | Uganda (Gulu district) | Descriptive cross-sectional study | 1994–1999 (5years) | 8595 people397 deaths due to external causes | 0.1/1000 people were due to drowning |
Osime et al., 2007 [51] | Nigeria (Benin City) | Descriptive cross-sectional study | 2001–2004 (4 years) | 5446 trauma related deaths (external causes) | Drowning accounted for 0.8% of all trauma related deaths |
Burrows et al., 2010 [35] | South Africa | Descriptive cross-sectional study | 2001–2003 (2 years) | 3,301,190 children aged 0–14 years 2923 injury related deaths (external causes) of children aged 0–14 years | Female: 2.1/100,000 |
Male: 5.3/100,000 | |||||
Ohene et al., 2010 [46] | Ghana (Accra) | Descriptive cross-sectional | 2001–203 (2 years) | 151 injury related deaths (external causes) among adolescents aged 10–19 years | 38% of deaths were due to drowning |
Garrib et al., 2011 [40] | South Africa | Analytical cross-sectional | 2000–2007 (7 years) | 133,483 people 1022 injury related deaths (external causes) | 3.3% due to drowning |
Mendes et al., 2011 [29] | South Africa (Johannesburg) | Descriptive cross-sectional study | 2006–2009 (4 years) | 1760 unintentional injuries (external causes) | 0.34% of the deaths were due to drowning § |
Mamady et al., 2012 [58] | Guinea | Analytical cross-sectional study | 2007 | 9,710,144 (total population) 7066 fatal injuries (external causes) | 4.4/100,000 |
Odhiambo et al., 2013 [57] | Kenya | Analytical cross-sectional | 2003–2008 (5 years) | 220,000 people (total population) 11,147 adult deaths due to trauma (external causes) | 0.2% (23) deaths were due to drowning |
Weldearegawi et al., 2013 [45] | Ethiopia (Kilite Awlaelo surveillance site) | Descriptive cross-sectional study | 2009–2011 (3 years) | 409 deaths (all causes) | 4.6% of all deaths were due to drowning |
Streatfield et al., 2014 [20] | Burkina Faso Cote d’Ivoire Ethiopia The Gambia Ghana Kenya Malawi South Africa | Ecological study | 2000-2012 (3 years) | 111,910 deaths/ 12,204,043 person-years across Africa and Asia due to external causes | Rates/1000 person years Burkina Faso (Nouna): 0.00 Burkina Faso (Ouagadougou): 0.20 Cote d’Ivoire (Taabo): 0.14 Ethiopia (Kilite Awlaelo): 0.13 The Gambia (Farafenni): 0.11 Ghana (Dodowa): 0.28 Ghana (Navrongo): 0.48 Kenya (Kilifi): 0.18 Kenya (Kisumu): 0.22 Kenya (Nairobi): 0.18 Malawi (Karonga): 0.19 South Africa (Africa Centre): 0.19 South Africa (Agincourt): 0.07 |
Chasimpha et al., 2015 [48] | Malawi (Karonga district) | Nested case-control | 2002 2012 | 59,947 people (children and adults) in Karonga districtDeaths due to external causes | Unintentional drowning rate: 8.6/100,000 |
Kone et al., 2015 [56] | Cote d’Ivoire | Descriptive cross-sectional study | 2009–2011 (3 years) | 39,422 people (total population)712 deaths (all causes) | Unintentional drowning rates |
Male * | |||||
5–14: 0.1% | |||||
15–49: 0.3% | |||||
Female * | |||||
5–14 years: 0.02% | |||||
Matzopoulos et al., 2015 [36] | South Africa | Descriptive cross-sectional study | 2009 | 52,493 injury related deaths (external causes) | Unintentional drowning3.3/100,000 |
Olatunya et al., 2015 [52] | Nigeria (Ekiti State) | Descriptive cross-sectional study | 2012–2014 (2 years) | 5264 children admitted for injury related incidents (external causes) | Drowning accounted for 4.54% of all injuries |
Pretorius and Niekerk, 2015 [33] | South Africa: Guateng | Descriptive cross-sectional study | 2008–2011 (2 years) | Total population in Gauteng 5404 fatal injuries (external causes) in children aged 0–19 years | 8.9% of all fatal injuries were due to drowning |
Groenewald et al., 2016 [38] | South Africa: Western Cape | Descriptive cross-sectional study | 2011 | 2412 deaths (all causes) of children under 5 years of age | Drowning accounted for 2.8% of all deaths |
Mathews et al., 2016 [37] | South Africa: Western Cape and KwaZulu-Natal | Descriptive cross-sectional study | 2014 | 711 child deaths (all causes) | Drowning deaths accounted for 2.5% of all deaths |
Reid et al., 2016 [39] | South Africa: Western Cape | Descriptive cross-sectional study | 2011 | 180,814 children under 5 years of age (total population) 1051 under-5 deaths (all causes) | 11% of all deaths were due to drowning |
Meel BL, 2017 [34] | South Africa | Descriptive epidemiology | 1996–2015 (20 years) | 24, 693 deaths due to unnatural (external) causes | 5.1% of unnatural deaths were due to drowning |
Purcell et al., 2017 [49] | Malawi: Lilongwe | Descriptive cross-sectional study | 2008–2013 (6 years) | 30,462 children with traumatic injuries 343 deaths due to external causes | 11.4% of the deaths were due to drowning |
Erasmus et al., 2018 [41] | South Africa | Descriptive cross-sectional study | 2010–2014 (5 years) | 184 injuries related (external causes) deaths over the time period | 75% (138) of the deaths were due to drowning |
Gelaye et al., 2018 [44] | Ethiopia | Descriptive cross-sectional study | 2009–2013 (5 years) | 623 injury related deaths (external causes) | 21.8% (136) deaths were due to drowning |
Ossei et al., 2019 [47] | Ghana | Descriptive cross-sectional study | 2008–2016 (8 years) | 1470 unnatural deaths (external causes) | 7.14% of the deaths were due to drowning |
Authors, Reference, Year | Country | Study Population | Proportions or Rates of Potential Risk Factors | Potential Risk Factors/Risk Factors Identified | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Davis and Smith, 1982 [33] | South Africa (Cape Town) | 1,500,000 people | Alcohol | ||||
Knobel et al., 1984 [28] | South Africa | 3248 children < 15 years | Race | Race: whites | |||
Coloured | 10.7% | ||||||
White | 16.1% | ||||||
Black | 7.9% | ||||||
Gender | Male | ||||||
Male | 11.7% | ||||||
Female | 9.7% | ||||||
Age | |||||||
<1 year | 6.9% | Age: 6–14 | |||||
1–5 years | 12.8% | ||||||
6–14 years | 20.3% | Summer season | |||||
Weekends | |||||||
Davis and Smith 1985 [24] | South Africa (Cape Town) | 1,600,000 people | Race | Race: Black race for adults >30 years | |||
Black race | 32.3/100,000 | White race for children 0–5 years | |||||
Colored | 24.2/100,000 | Male | |||||
White | 13.4/100,000 | ||||||
Gender | |||||||
Male | 38.7/100,000 | ||||||
Female | 8.3/100,000 | ||||||
Age | Age: 21–30 | ||||||
0–5 years | 13.3% | ||||||
6–10 years | 5.8% | ||||||
11–15 years | 4.9% | ||||||
16–20 years | 10.98% | ||||||
21–30 years | 25.14% | Summer season | |||||
31–40 years | 15.61% | Swimming pools | |||||
>40 years | 24.28% | Alcohol | |||||
Grainger 1985 [60] | Seychelles | 119 drowning deaths | Age | Age: 40–49 years | |||
0–9 years | 6.72% | Epilepsy | |||||
10–19 years | 13.44% | Head injury | |||||
20–29 years | 16.8% | Time of day: 12–2 pm | |||||
30–39 years | 18.5% | ||||||
40–49 years | 21.8% | ||||||
50–59 years | 12.6% | ||||||
60–69 years | 5.88% | ||||||
70+ years | 4.2% | ||||||
Gender | |||||||
Male | 109 deaths | Male | |||||
Female | 10 deaths | ||||||
Kibel et al., 1990 [31] | South Africa | 14,118 children under 15 years of age (injuries related death) | Age | Age: 1–4 years | |||
<1year | 7.4% | ||||||
1–4 years | 23.0% | ||||||
5–14 years | 20.1% | ||||||
Race | <1 year | White race for children <1 year to 4 years | |||||
Blacks | 6.7% | Black race for children aged 5–14 years | |||||
Whites | 9.5% | Site: | |||||
Coloured | 8.3% | Swimming pools for white children | |||||
Asians | 6.4% | Dams and rivers for older black children | |||||
1–4 years | |||||||
Blacks | 18.8% | ||||||
Whites | 42.7% | ||||||
Coloured | 22.1% | ||||||
Asians | 9.4% | ||||||
5–14 years | |||||||
Blacks | 21.9% | ||||||
Whites | 12.7% | ||||||
Coloured | 21.2% | ||||||
Asians | 9.4% | ||||||
Flisher et al., 1992 [42] | South Africa | 9288 adolescent deaths due to external causes | Race | 10–14 years | Age: 10–14 years | ||
Whites | 6.3% | Black race for adolescents 10–14 years old | |||||
Coloured | 25.2% | Asian race for adolescents 15–19 years old | |||||
Asians | 12.7% | Summer season | |||||
Black | 24.2% | ||||||
Race | 15–19 years | ||||||
Whites | 4.2% | ||||||
Coloured | 9.7% | ||||||
Asians | 12.5% | ||||||
Black | 6.3% | ||||||
Lerer et al., 1997 [32] | South Africa (Cape Town) | 3690 non-natural mortality | Age | Number of drowning deaths | Age: 0–14 years | ||
0–14 years: | 35 | ||||||
15–24 years: | 10 | ||||||
25–34 years | 16 | ||||||
35–44 years | 16 | ||||||
45–54 years | 12 | ||||||
55–64 years | 3 | ||||||
65–74 years | 1 | ||||||
75+ years | 3 | ||||||
Kobusingye et al., 2001 [55] | Uganda (Mukono district) | 34 fatal injuries | Age | % of drowning | Age: 10–39 years | ||
<10 years | 0% | Extensive water surface | |||||
10–19 years | 18% | ||||||
20–29 years | 18% | ||||||
30–39 years | 18% | ||||||
40–49 years | 0% | ||||||
>50 years | 0% | ||||||
Moshiro et al., 2001 [59] | Tanzania | 1478 deaths due to injuries all age groups | Female gender/100,000 population | Females; | |||
Dar es Salaam | Hai District | Morogoro | 0–4 years (across the three districts) | ||||
0–4 years | 7.0 | 17.1 | 6.9 | ||||
5–14 years | 2.2 | 5.0 | 6.0 | Males: | |||
15–59 years | 5.2 | 3.0 | 4.2 | Dar es Salaam: 15–59 years | |||
60+ years | 2.8 | 4.6 | Hai District: 0–4 years | ||||
Morogoro: 60 years and above | |||||||
Male gender/100,000 population | |||||||
Dar es Salaam | Hai District | Morogoro | |||||
0–4 years | 3.4 | 12.3 | 12.1 | ||||
5–14 years | 4.9 | 9.0 | 3.6 | ||||
15–59 years | 12.4 | 10.6 | 7.9 | ||||
60+ years | 8.5 | 16.1 | |||||
Meel BL, 2008 [27] | South Africa (Mthatha) | 405 drowning deaths | Male | Female | Male | ||
1–10 years | 23.4% | 6.9% | Age: 1–20 years | ||||
11–20 years | 15.2% | 9.2% | |||||
21–30 years | 9.8% | 4.7% | |||||
31–40 years | 11.3% | 2.8% | |||||
41–50 years | 5.0% | 1.3% | |||||
51–60 years | 3.8% | 0.6% | |||||
61+ years | 3.1% | 2.5% | |||||
Burrows et al., 2010 [35] | South Africa | 2923 injury deaths of children aged 0–14 years | Drowning rate per 100,000 | ||||
Gender | |||||||
Female | 2.1 | Buffalo City | |||||
Male | 5.3 | ||||||
Male | |||||||
Population group | |||||||
Asian | 0.9 | ||||||
White | 4.3 | ||||||
Coloured | 2.0 | ||||||
African | 4.3 | African | |||||
City | |||||||
Tshwane | 2.9 | ||||||
Cape Town | 2.2 | ||||||
Johannesburg | 4.2 | ||||||
eThekwini | 3.8 | ||||||
Nelson Mandela | 3.7 | ||||||
Buffalo City | 9.2 | ||||||
Ohene et al., 2010 [46] | Ghana (Accra) | 151 injury related deaths among adolescents aged 10–19 years | Gender | Male | |||
Female | 25% | ||||||
Male | 44% | ||||||
Age | |||||||
10–14 years | 46% | Age: 10–14 years | |||||
15–19 years | 33% | ||||||
Garrib et al., 2011 [40] | South Africa | 1022 injury related deaths | Age | Children aged 0–15 years | |||
0–15 years | 65% | ||||||
>15 years | 35% | ||||||
Gender (rate/100,000 person years) | |||||||
Male | 6.2 | Male | |||||
Female | 3.4 | ||||||
Mamady et al., 2012 [58] | Guinea | 7066 fatal injuries | Female | Ref | |||
Male | OR 2.8; 95% CI (2.3–3.5) | ||||||
0–4 years | Ref | ||||||
5–14 years | OR 2.0; 95% CI (1.1–3.5) | ||||||
15–24 years | OR 8.9; 95% CI (5.3–15.0) | ||||||
25–64 years | OR 7.0; 95% CI (4.2–11.7) | ||||||
65+ years | OR 7.9; 95% CI (4.4–14.3) | ||||||
Seleye-Fubara et al., 2012 [50] | Nigeria (Niger-delta region) | 85 drowning deaths | Alcohol | ||||
Hard drugs | |||||||
Epilepsy | |||||||
Donson and Nickerk, 2013 [25] | South Africa | 1648 drowning deaths | Age (rate/100,000) | ||||
0–4 years | 6.3 | 0–4-year age group | |||||
5–14 years | 2.2 | ||||||
15–29 years | 1.7 | Swimming pools | |||||
30–44 years | 1.8 | ||||||
45–59 years | 1.4 | Alcohol use | |||||
60+ years | 1.2 | ||||||
Gender (rate/100,000) | December | ||||||
Male | 3.4 | ||||||
Female | 0.9 | Male | |||||
Odhiambo et al., 2013 [57] | Kenya | 11,147 adult deaths due to trauma | Gender | ||||
Female | 13% | Male | |||||
Male | 87% | ||||||
Age | |||||||
<40 years | 83% | Young adults (<40 years of age) | |||||
>40 years | 17% | ||||||
Weldearegawi et al., 2013 [45] | Ethiopia (Kilite Awlaelo surveillance site) | 409 deceased | Gender | Male | |||
Female | 1.7% | ||||||
Male | 2.9% | ||||||
Chasimpha et al., 2015 [48] | Malawi (Karonga district) | 59,947 people (children and adults) in Karonga district | Children from fishing households | OR 3.07; 95% CI (1.03–9.10) ‡ | |||
Adult male with fishing as a source of income | OR 2.45; 95% CI (1.17–5.14) ‡ | ||||||
Adult males who are fishermen | OR 2.92; 95% CI (1.42–5.98) ‡ | ||||||
Adult females who have other occupations | OR 4.04; 95% CI (1.22–13.4) ‡ | ||||||
Joanknecht et al., 2015 [30] | South Africa (Cape Town) | 75 children admitted for a submersion incident | Public pools and the ocean for children older than 5 years of age | ||||
Private pools, baths and buckets for children less than 5 years | |||||||
Matzopoulos et al., 2015 [36] | South Africa | 52,493 injury related deaths | Gender (rate/100,000 population) | Male | |||
Female | 1.2 | ||||||
Male | 5.7 | ||||||
Pretorius and Niekerk, 2015 [33] | South Africa (Guateng) | 5404 fatal injuries in children aged 0–19 years | Age | ||||
0–1 year | 9.4% | Age: 2–3 years | |||||
13.4% | 2–3 years | 16.8% | |||||
4–6 years | 13..4% | ||||||
7–12 years | 13.1% | ||||||
13–19 years | 3.0% | ||||||
Mathews et al., 2016 [37] | South Africa (Western Cape and KwaZulu-Natal) | 711 child deaths | Age | ||||
<1 year | 1.1% | Age: 1–4 years | |||||
1–4 years | 5.8% | ||||||
5–14 years | 5.0% | ||||||
15–17 years | 1.9% | ||||||
Morris et al., 2016 [26] | South Africa (Pretoria) | 346 deaths due to external causes | Gender | ||||
Female | 21% | Male | |||||
Male | 79% | ||||||
Race | |||||||
Black | 71% | Black race | |||||
White | 24% | ||||||
Coloured | 4% | ||||||
Asian | 1% | ||||||
Age | Age >18 years | ||||||
<1 year | 15% | ||||||
1–2 years | 19% | Summer months (December to February) | |||||
2–13 years | 18% | Alcohol | |||||
13–18 years | 3% | Swimming pool | |||||
>18 years | 45% | ||||||
Kobusingye et al., 2017 [54] | Uganda (Buikwe; Kampala; Mukono; Wakiso) | 2804 people (population in the community) | Access to water bodies (for transportation or fishing) | ||||
Overloading | |||||||
Stormy weather | |||||||
Old age of boats | |||||||
Meel BL, 2017 [34] | South Africa | 24,693 deaths due to unnatural causes | Gender | Female | |||
Female | 6.07% | ||||||
Male | 4.8% | ||||||
Gelaye et al., 2018 [44] | Ethiopia | 623 injury related deaths | Gender | Female | |||
Female | 22% | No formal education (illiterates) | |||||
Male | 21.1% | ||||||
Saunders et al., 2018 [43] | South Africa (Western Cape) | 1391 drowning deaths | Age (rate/100,000 population) | Age: 0–19 years | |||
Children (0–19 years) | 3.8 | ||||||
Adults (20+ years) | 3.0 | ||||||
Gender (rate /100,000 population) | |||||||
Female | 1.2 | Male | |||||
Male | 5.3 | Access to large open bodies of water | |||||
Summer season (December, January, February) | |||||||
Ossei et al., 2019 [47] | Ghana | 1470 unnatural deaths | Age | Age: 0–9 years | |||
≤9 years | 40% | ||||||
10–19 years | 17.14% | ||||||
20–29 years | 17.14% | ||||||
30–39 years | 10.48% | ||||||
40–49 years | 6.67% | ||||||
50–59 years | 3.81% | ||||||
60–69 years | 2.86% | ||||||
≥70 years | 1.90% | ||||||
Gender | Male | ||||||
Female | 22.9% | ||||||
Male | 77.1% |
Authors, Reference, Year | Country | Study Population | Prevention Strategy | Hierarchy of Controls |
---|---|---|---|---|
Davis and Smith, 1982 [23] | South Africa (Cape Town) | 1,500,000 people | Increase public awareness | Administrative control |
Media campaign to reduce drinking in combination with aquatic activities | ||||
Davis and Smith 1985 [24] | South Africa (Cape Town) | 1,600,000 people | Live saving facilities | Engineering control |
Improved adult supervision of children | Administrative control | |||
Grainger 1985 [60] | Seychelles | 165 deaths due to accidents | Primary health education proposed | |
119 drowning deaths | ||||
Kibel et al., 1990 [31] | South Africa | 14,118 children under 15 years of age | Increase public awareness | Administrative control |
Safety legislation to reduce environment hazards | Administrative control | |||
Flisher et al., 1992 [42] | South Africa | 9288 adolescent deaths | Media efforts/ intervention to prevent drowning | Administrative control |
Moshiro et al., 2001 [59] | Tanzania | 1478 deaths due to injuries | Education | Administrative control |
Lett et al., 2006 [53] | Uganda (Gulu district) | 397 deaths due to injuries associated with war | Formal monitoring by international bodies with no political or economic interest in the conflict. | Administrative control |
Meel BL, 2008 [27] | South Africa (Mthatha) | 405 drowning deaths | Education and training at schools about life skills | Administrative control |
Ohene et al., 2010 [46] | Ghana (Accra) | 151 deaths among adolescents aged 10–19 years | Aquatic safety education | Administrative control |
Supervision near recreational water bodies | Administrative control | |||
Donson and Nickerk, 2013 [25] | South Africa | 1648 drowning deaths | Public aquatic safety education | Administrative control |
Implementation of evidence-led safety measures | Administrative control | |||
Water safety legislation | Administrative control | |||
Weldearegawi et al., 2013 [45] | Ethiopia (Kilite Awlaelo surveillance site) | 409 deceased | Integrating occupational and safety education with existing health programme to reduce mortalities associated with accidents | Administrative control |
Chasimpha et al., 2015 [48] | Malawi (Karonga district) | 59,947 people (children and adults) | Improved supervision of children around bodies of water | Administrative control |
Joanknecht et al., 2015 [30] | South Africa (Cape Town) | 75 children admitted for a submersion incident | Community based education and prevention programs focusing on restricting access to private pools for young children | Administrative control |
Morris et al., 2016 [26] | South Africa (Pretoria) | 346 deaths due to external causes | Public education regarding basic life support measures and dangers of alcohol consumption and swimming | Administrative control |
Use of safety nets/barriers | Engineering control | |||
Kobusingye et al., 2017 [54] | Uganda (Buikwe; Kampala; Mukono; Wakiso) | 2804 people | Enforce boat construction and maintenance regulations | Administrative control |
Loading limits | Administrative control | |||
Boat crew training | Administrative control | |||
Use of weather forecast | Administrative control | |||
Gelaye et al., 2018 [44] | Ethiopia | 623 injury related deaths | Community awareness | Administrative control |
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Miller, L.; Alele, F.O.; Emeto, T.I.; Franklin, R.C. Epidemiology, Risk Factors and Measures for Preventing Drowning in Africa: A Systematic Review. Medicina 2019, 55, 637. https://doi.org/10.3390/medicina55100637
Miller L, Alele FO, Emeto TI, Franklin RC. Epidemiology, Risk Factors and Measures for Preventing Drowning in Africa: A Systematic Review. Medicina. 2019; 55(10):637. https://doi.org/10.3390/medicina55100637
Chicago/Turabian StyleMiller, Lauren, Faith O. Alele, Theophilus I. Emeto, and Richard C. Franklin. 2019. "Epidemiology, Risk Factors and Measures for Preventing Drowning in Africa: A Systematic Review" Medicina 55, no. 10: 637. https://doi.org/10.3390/medicina55100637
APA StyleMiller, L., Alele, F. O., Emeto, T. I., & Franklin, R. C. (2019). Epidemiology, Risk Factors and Measures for Preventing Drowning in Africa: A Systematic Review. Medicina, 55(10), 637. https://doi.org/10.3390/medicina55100637