Monday, December 17, 2012

Understanding and Identifying potential risks for young people at outdoor music fesitvals


Researchers: Alison Hutton, Jamie Ranse, Paul Arbon.

The aim of this research was to understand the nature of patient presentations at music festivals around Australia. This study used a minimum data set developed by Ranse and Hutton (2012) which used four main categories of presentation type.

These being illness, injury, environmental factors and mental health. Outdoor music festivals are unique events (Gleder and Robinson, 2009), and in the mass gathering literature are espoused to have a higher incident of patient presentations than other types of mass gathering (Milsten et al, 2003). Often single events are written up, which makes it difficult to generalize to other events, therefore the aim of this research is to discuss characteristics of patient presentations of 25 outdoor music festivals across four Australian states.

The project found that more than two thirds of those who present are women. In addition males were more likely to present with injuries and women were more likely to present with illness related symptons. The environmental data includes the ingestion of drugs and alcohol. This data set showed that patients that presented to onsite care with drug and alcohol related issues had the higher rate of being transferred to hospital.


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