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World is `safer` today than 25 yrs ago

Though the world is, has been and will always be a pretty messed up place, a new study has revealed that the global toll taken by injuries on daily life has fallen by almost a third in the past quarter of a century, making it a safer place to live in.

Washington D.C: Though the world is, has been and will always be a pretty messed up place, a new study has revealed that the global toll taken by injuries on daily life has fallen by almost a third in the past quarter of a century, making it a safer place to live in.

Researchers dug into the latest data from the Global Burden of Diseases and Injuries, an effort that began in 1990 and now encompasses information from 188 countries in 21 distinct regions of the world. They wanted to examine whether dozens of types of injuries had become more or less frequent over time and whether fewer people were dying from them.

For 2013, the most recent year for which data are available, the researchers calculated that nearly a billion people worldwide suffered injuries that required medical attention, according to results. The major causes of death were not surprising: Road-related accidents claimed more lives than any other type of injury, followed by self-harm, falls and interpersonal violence.

Despite those numbers, the researchers found that a measure known as "disability-adjusted life years," calculated by adding years of life lost to death and years of life lived with disability, had fallen by 31 percent between 1990 and 2013. The rate of decline was "significant" for 22 of 26 injury categories.

Women in South Asian had high rates of fire-related injuries. Eastern Europe and Central Asia reported high rates of drowning and self-harm, while Latin America recorded high rates of homicide, even in children.

In almost every region, injury rates remained higher in men than in women, with the exception of those 80 years and older, for whom gender differences virtually disappeared. And among people ages 15 to 49, there was an eight-fold difference in road traffic injuries between the high-income Asia Pacific region and poorer areas of western Sub-Saharan Africa.

The study is published online in the journal Injury Prevention.

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