RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Social and economic factors associated with child unintentional injury mortality in high-income countries JF Injury Prevention JO Inj Prev FD BMJ Publishing Group Ltd SP 194 OP 199 DO 10.1136/ip-2023-045016 VO 30 IS 3 A1 Shimony-Kanat, Sarit A1 Orr, Daniela A1 Falk, Amir YR 2024 UL http://injuryprevention.bmj.com/content/30/3/194.abstract AB Introduction Recognising the connection between country-level social determinants of health, and child unintentional injury mortality can contribute to better resource allocation for child safety. This cross-sectional country-level study aims to investigate such a link where the role of income inequality (Gini Index) is examined alongside education expenditure, current health expenditure and gross national income (GNI) per capita.Methods A total of 49 high-income countries were studied, using the WHO Global Health Estimates 2016, the World Bank’s World Development Indicators for education and GNI per capita, and the standardised world income inequality database to compile estimates of child unintentional injury mortality rates and selected socioeconomic characteristics.Results A wide range of childhood mortality rates from unintentional injury was observed (1.3–10.0 deaths per 100 000 children). Such risk is strongly associated with income inequality (0.50), GNI per capita (–0.35) and education expenditure (–0.01) (mediated by income inequality). No association was found to current health expenditure. The results explain 52% of the variance in child unintentional injury mortality.Conclusions In countries with higher overall economic activity and lower-income inequality, child mortality from unintentional injuries is lower. Allocation of education expenditure is one contributor to reducing income inequality; other factors need further exploration.Data are available in a public, open access repository. The study used public available datasets, open and free to use.