Ottawa Citizen

Preventabl­e injuries kill 43 Canadians a day, report says

- LIAM CASEY

Preventabl­e injuries kill dozens of Canadians every day and cost the country’s economy billions of dollars, says a new report released Wednesday.

The report by Parachute, a group focusing on injury prevention, examined all injuries across the country in 2010.

Preventabl­e injuries were responsibl­e for about 43 deaths per day and were the top cause of death among Canadians aged 1 to 44, the report said. They also claimed the lives of more children than all other causes.

Injuries such as falls, drowning and transport accidents drained $27 billion from the economy.

“The simple fact is almost all of these injuries and deaths could have been prevented,” the report said.

In 2010, preventabl­e injuries in Canada resulted in: 15,866 deaths 231,596 Canadians were hospitaliz­ed

Nearly 3.5 million emergency room visits

More than 60,000 Canadians either partially or permanentl­y disabled

$15.9 billion in direct health care costs

$26.8 billion in total economic costs.

Falls were the top preventabl­e injury and the biggest drain on the economy accounting for $6.7 billion or 42 per cent of direct costs of injury.

Suicide and transport accidents were the leading cause of indirect costs of injury, both accounting for $2.1 billion.

Parachute said the data shows that the preventabl­e injuries’ cost and death toll have continued to rise since 2010, and the group forecasts an economic impact of $33 billion and a daily death toll of 46 people for 2015.

 ?? JUSTIN SULLIVAN/GETTY IMAGES ?? Falls were the top preventabl­e injury and the biggest drain on the economy, says a new injury prevention report.
JUSTIN SULLIVAN/GETTY IMAGES Falls were the top preventabl­e injury and the biggest drain on the economy, says a new injury prevention report.

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