Learning from the past to prevent avoidable loss in the future
Summary of the Child and Youth Mortality Review Committee’s 11th data report, 2010–14
Introduction
• Summary of key data from report. • Most data cover 2010–14. • Data primarily from the Mortality Review
Database. • Full data report − www.hqsc.govt.nz.
What does the CYMRC do?
• We review deaths of children and young
people aged 28 days to 24 years through our local review groups.
• Our aim − to find ways to prevent such deaths in the future.
• We look for national trends and patterns.
• We recommend policies and initiatives
agencies can develop to keep children and young people safe and healthy.
What does the CYMRC do?
The good news…
• Child and youth deaths are decreasing. • 2010 − 620 deaths, 2014 − 488 deaths. • Fewer deaths due to motor vehicle
crashes in 15−24-year-olds. • Fewer deaths from nearly all other causes
in 2014. • BUT plenty of work still to be done.
Key findings from report
How are our kids dying?
Mortality varies by age and ethnicity
Mortality varies by age and ethnicity
Poverty causes more than just hardship
The main causes of death change with age
The good news
The number of deaths overall is reducing.
Key messages about preventable deaths
• SUDI
• Pertussis (whooping cough)
• Driveway run-overs
SUDI
Many deaths are preventable by making sure the baby is in a safe
sleep space, every sleep.
A safe sleep space is:
• free from other people who might lie over the baby • free from gaps that could trap or wedge the baby • firm • flat • free from objects that might cover the face or
cause strangulation or the baby’s head coming forward
• free to breathe • free from tobacco smoke.
Pertussis (whooping cough)
• Very young babies are at the most risk of harm
from pertussis.
• Most babies who die from pertussis become sick before they are old enough to have vaccinations.
• Maternal immunisation in late pregnancy (the third trimester) protects unborn babies until they are old enough to have their own vaccinations.
Driveway run-overs
• Toddlers are small and hard to see when backing a car.
• Don’t let children play on the driveway. • Know where children are if backing out of
a driveway.
Acknowledgements
• NZ Mortality Review Data Group at the
University of Otago, which wrote the report.
• Health Promotion Agency for kind use of the pertussis infographic.
• Safekids Aotearoa for kind use of the driveway photo.
Source
• Numerator: NZ Mortality Review
Database.
• Denominators: Ministry of Health Live Births, and NZ MRDG Estimated Resident Population 2010–14.