Supplier
CDC/NCIPC and CPSC
Years Available
2001 to present
Periodicity
Annual
Mode of Collection
Surveillance data (passive data collection) collected at a sample of U.S. hospital emergency departments.
Description
The National Electronic Injury Surveillance System – All Injury Program (NEISS-AIP) is an expansion of the Consumer Product Safety Commission's (CPSC) National Electronic Injury Surveillance System (NEISS), used to monitor consumer-product related injuries. NEISS-AIP expands the CPSC's definition of reportable injuries to include all nonfatal injuries and poisonings treated in U.S. hospital emergency departments, whether or not associated with consumer products. NEISS collects injury data from a nationally representative sample of U.S. hospital emergency departments; NEISS-AIP uses a subsample of those emergency departments for its data collection.
Selected Content
NEISS-AIP collects demographic data, cause and mechanism of injury, intent of injury, principal diagnosis, locale where injury occurred and whether the injury is work-related. For assaults, data on relationship of perpetrator to injured person and context of assault are also collected.
Methodology
NEISS hospitals are a stratified probability sample of all U.S. hospitals that have at least 6 beds and provide 24-hour emergency department (ED) services. The NEISS-AIP data are collected at a subset of these hospitals and include very large inner-city hospitals with trauma centers, as well as large urban, suburban, rural, and children's hospitals. Trained, onsite hospital coders abstract and code data for injury-related cases from electronic ED records. Coded data and a narrative are transmitted electronically to the NEISS-AIP program where quality assurance coders review and complete the coding. Data are weighted to produce national estimates.
Response Rates and Sample Size
NEISS collects data from a sample of approximately 100 hospitals with 24 hour emergency department services. NEISS-AIP data are collected at 66 of these hospitals. About 500,000 injuries are reported annually.