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Discussion

Using syndromic surveillance data from January 2021–December 2023, the proportion of ED visits related to pedestrian injury was highest among six racial and ethnic minority groups. The racial and ethnic disparities in this report are consistent with previous studies. For example, among patients in the U.S. Nationwide Inpatient Sample during 2009–2016, admission rates were elevated among Black, Hispanic, and multiracial persons and persons of another race (2). Pedestrian death rates nationwide during 2018 were higher among AI/AN and Black persons than among White persons (3). However, the visit proportion in the current study was higher among Asian persons than among White persons, whereas pedestrian death rates in 2018 indicated the reverse (3).

Unsafe walking environments and limited investment in infrastructure for pedestrians (e.g., sidewalks, street lighting, and crosswalks) can result from past development that prioritized vehicles (4) and historical segregation and disinvestment in neighborhoods based on race and income (5). Healthy community design strategies exist that address pedestrian injury inequities while minimizing harms, such as displacement, that can occur among persons from some racial and ethnic groups and with lower incomes (6).

In addition to racial and ethnic inequities, differences were also found by sex, age, season, and region. The higher proportion of pedestrian visits among males aligns with 2021 pedestrian death rates (1). The visit proportion was highest among persons aged 15–24 years compared with other age groups. This finding differs from 2021 pedestrian death rates, which were highest among adults aged 60–64 years (1), likely because of increasing frailty with age (7). The pedestrian visit proportion was highest during autumn, as was the number of pedestrian deaths in traffic crashes during 2020–2021.††† Variation in regional visit proportions might be influenced by differences in pedestrian volume or population density.§§§

Risk factors for pedestrian injury are generally multifactorial and can include exposure to vehicles traveling at high speeds, alcohol involvement on the part of the driver or pedestrian, and insufficient visibility. Slowing vehicles by narrowing or reducing lanes, reducing speed limits, or using automated speed cameras can protect pedestrians, as can improving crossing safety and separating pedestrians from vehicles through new or improved sidewalks (8,9). In 2021, an estimated 19% of crashes resulting in pedestrian deaths involved drivers with blood alcohol concentrations of ≥0.08 g/dL (1). Despite proven effectiveness of stricter blood alcohol limits (9), only one state, Utah, has lowered its legal blood alcohol concentration from 0.08 to 0.05 g/dL. In the year after the law went into effect, the motor vehicle crash death rate per mile driven decreased 18% in Utah, compared with a 6% decrease in the rest of the United States (10). Most pedestrian traffic deaths (77% in 2021) occurred after dark (1). Enhancing visibility through strategies such as street lighting can help reduce pedestrian traffic deaths.

A comprehensive approach involving collaboration among federal, state, and local partners could help prevent pedestrian injuries and address social and structural inequities that contribute to traffic-related injury risk. The Safe System approach¶¶¶ provides a framework for helping prevent traffic injuries among all road users and minimizing harm when injuries occur and is based on five core elements: safer people, safer roads, safer speeds, safer vehicles, and better postcrash care. An example of collaboration within the Safe System approach is coordination between state and local communities on speed management strategies. Although decisions about road speeds are usually controlled at the state level, local communities increasingly recognize the importance of managing vehicle speed for pedestrian safety. Timely ED data on pedestrian injuries could contribute to state and local data-driven safety traffic plans that help guide similar collaborative prevention strategies to create safer pedestrian environments. The Road to Zero Coalition**** has assembled organizations and federal partners to work together to achieve zero crash deaths by 2050, using strategies that adopt the Safe System approach. Partners include CDC and the U.S. Department of Transportation. The National Roadway Safety Strategy,†††† released in 2022, outlines the U.S. Department of Transportation’s strategy, emphasizing the Safe System approach. The 2021 Infrastructure Investment and Jobs Act§§§§ provided funding for transportation programs designed to reduce injury risk and disparities among pedestrians.

Limitations

The findings in this report are subject to at least five limitations. First, NSSP data are not nationally representative. Second, this report includes only a percentage of U.S. EDs, and causes of injuries are not always documented in medical records; therefore, the weekly numbers of pedestrian injury ED visits are likely underestimates. Third, EDs might collect race and ethnicity data differently, which could result in misclassification. Fourth, detailed crash information such as vehicle speed, time of day, roadway and pedestrian infrastructure, and driver and pedestrian behavior (e.g., impairment) are not available in NSSP. Finally, differences in ED usage across groups, both general usage and that specific to pedestrian injuries, could affect results.

Implications for Public Health Practice

Findings from ED data on pedestrian injuries emphasize the need to prioritize prevention efforts for pedestrians. NSSP provides near real-time pedestrian injury data. These data can be analyzed at the local, state, and national levels to monitor the most recent trends, identify populations and areas most affected, and tailor implementation strategies supporting the Safe System approach, a framework designed to protect all road users.

Source of original article: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) / MMWR (Journal) (tools.cdc.gov).
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