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Hiking is Dangerous?

Survey ranks the activity behind snowboarding and sledding as the most dangerous

The Centers for Disease Control (CDC) put together a survey of injury data from 2004 and 2005 to come up with a list of the sports with the highest rates of injury per 100,000 people. And I was shocked to see that hiking, that most fundamental of human activities—you know, where you put one foot in front of the other—was ranked third ahead of water-skiing, jet-skiing, and mountain biking.

The news as reported in today’s New York Times, does point out that skier injuries were conspicuously absent from the survey—and as a snowboarder, I’d say they’re suspiciously absent. Apparently there was no useful date for the CDC to tap regarding skiers. I suspect that if there were, then skiing would’ve been in the top three, and pushed hiking off the podium. Or, maybe not. After all, I never would’ve thought that hiking would make the top three.

 Some other fun facts from the survey which was published in the recent issue of Wilderness and Environmental Medicine:

Those crazy kids: 58% of injuries occur to people between the ages of 0-24. After age 35, injuries hold steady at 13%. I suppose the high rate of youthful injuries have to do with being uncoordinated and learning new sports, but I also suspect that some sort of sports-minded Darwinism is going on here as well.

Testosterone maniacs: Over two-thirds of injuries occur to men, probably because we’re guys and we find doing stupid stuff that could kill us highly appealing.

“Oh, my leg!” The majority of boo-boo’s, 27%, involve the legs, which makes sense when you see that nearly all these sports involve our legs (Fishing and boating being the possible exceptions).

READERS COMMENTS

The survey does not say or imply these activities are the most dangerous, it only looks at which ones have the most ER visits. The article estimate about 13,448 hiking injuries in the US each year. To find out the risk of hiking (how dangerous it is), you have to look at how many people actually go hiking, and for how many hours each year.

PS the survey does include skiing, there just weren't enough injuries to calculate a nationwide estimate (see table 6 of the original article)... So it could be that nobody skis anymore, or else skiing just isn't that dangerous.
Posted: Jul 09, 2008 Michelle

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