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Characteristics of Lethal Electrical Injuries in Central and Northeastern Bulgaria for a 27-Year Period (1980–2006)

Objective: Despite the advancement of forensic science, electro-traumas still pose serious challenges. Methods: We have studied the forensic medical documentation from 485 autopsies following electro-trauma over the period 1980–2006, performed at the forensic wards in 6 districts of the country The...

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Autor principal: Dokov, William
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Open Science Company, LLC 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2248279/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18345280
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author Dokov, William
author_facet Dokov, William
author_sort Dokov, William
collection PubMed
description Objective: Despite the advancement of forensic science, electro-traumas still pose serious challenges. Methods: We have studied the forensic medical documentation from 485 autopsies following electro-trauma over the period 1980–2006, performed at the forensic wards in 6 districts of the country The statistical analysis includes comparison of means and percentages. They are carried out using SPSS Version 11. We accepted statistical significant values of P equals; .05. Results: The incidence of lethal injuries caused by electricity is 1.29 cases per 100000 people per year. The average age of the deceased from electro-trauma is 37.3 years. Men (85%) prevails over women (14.84%). There are 24.32% of the cases that are work-related accidents, and 60.61% of them are domestic. Suicide through electrocution is relatively rare: 7.21%. Homicide has not been registered in our study. Low-voltage injuries (42.06%) are more common than high-voltage ones (30.72%). 62.68% of the lethal cases occur in summer, between June and September. Conclusions: Among the studied cases, electro-trauma occurs at a young age. The victims are typically men. Work-related accidents are more common than domestic ones; injuries by low voltage are observed more frequently than those by high voltage. Suicides are very rare, and not a single case of homicide has been observed in the study. There exists a seasonal variation in incidence of lethal accidents caused by electric current, its peak being during the summer months.
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spelling pubmed-22482792008-03-15 Characteristics of Lethal Electrical Injuries in Central and Northeastern Bulgaria for a 27-Year Period (1980–2006) Dokov, William Eplasty Article Objective: Despite the advancement of forensic science, electro-traumas still pose serious challenges. Methods: We have studied the forensic medical documentation from 485 autopsies following electro-trauma over the period 1980–2006, performed at the forensic wards in 6 districts of the country The statistical analysis includes comparison of means and percentages. They are carried out using SPSS Version 11. We accepted statistical significant values of P equals; .05. Results: The incidence of lethal injuries caused by electricity is 1.29 cases per 100000 people per year. The average age of the deceased from electro-trauma is 37.3 years. Men (85%) prevails over women (14.84%). There are 24.32% of the cases that are work-related accidents, and 60.61% of them are domestic. Suicide through electrocution is relatively rare: 7.21%. Homicide has not been registered in our study. Low-voltage injuries (42.06%) are more common than high-voltage ones (30.72%). 62.68% of the lethal cases occur in summer, between June and September. Conclusions: Among the studied cases, electro-trauma occurs at a young age. The victims are typically men. Work-related accidents are more common than domestic ones; injuries by low voltage are observed more frequently than those by high voltage. Suicides are very rare, and not a single case of homicide has been observed in the study. There exists a seasonal variation in incidence of lethal accidents caused by electric current, its peak being during the summer months. Open Science Company, LLC 2008-02-15 /pmc/articles/PMC2248279/ /pubmed/18345280 Text en Copyright © 2008 The Author(s) http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ This is an open-access article whereby the authors retain copyright of the work. The article is distributed under the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Article
Dokov, William
Characteristics of Lethal Electrical Injuries in Central and Northeastern Bulgaria for a 27-Year Period (1980–2006)
title Characteristics of Lethal Electrical Injuries in Central and Northeastern Bulgaria for a 27-Year Period (1980–2006)
title_full Characteristics of Lethal Electrical Injuries in Central and Northeastern Bulgaria for a 27-Year Period (1980–2006)
title_fullStr Characteristics of Lethal Electrical Injuries in Central and Northeastern Bulgaria for a 27-Year Period (1980–2006)
title_full_unstemmed Characteristics of Lethal Electrical Injuries in Central and Northeastern Bulgaria for a 27-Year Period (1980–2006)
title_short Characteristics of Lethal Electrical Injuries in Central and Northeastern Bulgaria for a 27-Year Period (1980–2006)
title_sort characteristics of lethal electrical injuries in central and northeastern bulgaria for a 27-year period (1980–2006)
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2248279/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18345280
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