Municipality-Level Checklist to Promote Parental Behaviors Related to Prevention of Unintentional Injury in Young Children: A Multilevel Analysis of National Data

Unintentional injury is a major cause of morbidity and mortality among young children in developed countries. In this national study, we examined the role of municipality-level safety checklist implementation for reducing risky child-safety-related parental behaviors. Nationwide data were collected...

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Bibliographic Details
Published inJournal of epidemiology Vol. 30; no. 10; pp. 450 - 456
Main Authors Sampei, Makiko, Kato, Tsuguhiko, Piedvache, Aurelie, Morisaki, Naho, Saito, Junko, Akiyama, Yuka, Shinohara, Ryoji, Yamagata, Zentaro, Urayama, Kevin Y, Kondo, Naoki
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published Japan Japan Epidemiological Association 05.10.2020
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Summary:Unintentional injury is a major cause of morbidity and mortality among young children in developed countries. In this national study, we examined the role of municipality-level safety checklist implementation for reducing risky child-safety-related parental behaviors. Nationwide data were collected to evaluate the impact of the Healthy Parents and Children 21 initiative of the Japanese government. Questionnaires related to safety checklist implementation were administered to a random sample of municipal offices and to parents at the child's routine 1.5-year health exam on parental behaviors related to child safety. Adjusting for municipality and individual-level variables, multilevel analysis was used to examine the relationship between municipality checklist implementation (4-month health exam) and six child-safety-related parental behaviors at the 1.5-year health exam. Families (n = 23,394) across 371 municipalities in Japan were included in this study; 5.6% of municipalities implemented a child safety intervention. Living in a municipality with a checklist intervention was associated with reduction in certain risk behaviors (not keeping tobacco/ashtray and candy out of the reach of infants, not using a car seat, not having a lock on bathing room door). However, after additionally taking into account municipality-level residual effects, only the "tobacco" behavior showed association with municipality of residence (Interval odds ratio, 0.25-0.94) and others were weak in the context of other potential municipality-level influences. A municipality-level intervention taking a checklist-based approach at the 4-month health exam in Japan appears to promote certain child safety behaviors in parents with children around 1.5 years of age.
ISSN:0917-5040
1349-9092
DOI:10.2188/jea.JE20190079