XClose

Institute for Global Health

Home
Menu

Childhood injuries in rural Bangladesh

Developing an integrated community mobilisation package to prevent childhood injuries in rural Bangladesh

Project Summary

Injury and violence are major global killers of children, responsible for over 900,000 deaths in children and young people under the age of 18 years each year.  Unintentional injuries (mainly road traffic injuries, drowning, poisonings, burns, and falls) account for almost 90% of these injuries and they are among the top three causes of death among children.  About 90% of injury-related deaths occur in LMICs.

In Bangladesh, while childhood deaths due to infectious diseases have declined over the past decade, deaths due to injuries in the same age group are increasing.  Drowning accounts for more than 90% of injury deaths (and more than 40% of overall death) in children under 5.

There is a wide range of interventions that have shown to be effective in preventing and reducing injuries in all countries.  However, most of evidence on effectiveness of interventions for unintentional injuries is from high income settings and might not be easily transferable to LMICs.  In addition, there is limited evidence for community-based interventions, in both high income and LMIC settings.

This study aims to develop and assess the feasibility and acceptability of an integrated package of community mobilisation interventions in preventing injuries among under 5 children in rural Bangladesh.

The potential intervention will be an innovative integrated package of community mobilisation activities – combining the strengths of mass media in generating awareness, of household-visits in providing tailored practical advice, and of participatory learning and action groups (PLA) to catalyse social action using this awareness and advice to act on the community, household, and individual barriers to injury prevention.

To design this package, a critical review of risk factors for childhood injuries and existing interventions in rural Bangladesh will combined with a qualitative explorative study.  In addition, feasibility and acceptability of the designed intervention will be assessed by a small-scale pilot.

Links to other research

Other research from the UCL Centre for Global Non-Communicable Diseases and the UCL Centre for Global Health Economics

Other research from IGH on Child Health, Public Health, Non-Communicable Diseases, Unintentional Injuries and Injury Prevention

Other research from IGH in Bangladesh