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Men hurt their eyes more
Australian Institute of Health and Welfare   
Wednesday, 04 February 2009
istock_blackeye.jpg
Black eyes and fractures around the socket
are the eye injuries that cause the most
hospitalisations.
Image: iStockphoto

Males, particularly those of working age, were more likely than females to suffer an injury to the eye, according to a report released today by the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare (AIHW).

'While eye injuries constitute just a very small percentage of GP visits (0.2 per cent), they make up about 6 per cent of emergency department visits; including people who have to be admitted to hospital and those who are treated and sent home,' said Clare Bradley of the AIHW's National Injury Surveillance Unit.'

According to the report, Eye-related injuries in Australia, about half (46 per cent) of GP visits for eye injuries were associated with a foreign body in the eye.

Four-fifths of those visits involved males; the majority of whom were of working age.

About half of those required medication and two in five required some kind of procedural treatment.

'A foreign body in the eye was also the most common reason for treatment in the emergency department and eye-related injury compensation claims, with the median time lost from work being about a week and a half,' Ms Bradley said.

'Conversely, fractures of the bones around the eye and superficial injury around the eye were the most common first diagnoses for hospitalised eye injuries,' she said.

About a quarter (23 per cent) of emergency department visits were due to a person being struck by, or colliding with, an object, and another 12 per cent were due to being struck by, or colliding with another person.

For those eye injuries serious enough to require hospitalisation, falls, assault, and transportation accidents were the main ways the injuries occurred.

More than two-thirds of hospitalised eye injury cases involved males.

Hospitalised eye injuries involving Indigenous Australians occurred at a much higher rate (234 cases per 100,000) than for other Australians (79 per 100,000).


Editor's Note: Original news release can be found here.
 

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