Leading Causes of Non-Fatal Injury by Mechanism

Emergency Department Visits, Leading Causes of Non-Fatal Injury by Mechanism, Rate per 100,000 Population, Florida, 2024
Rank0-1718-2425-4445-6465 and OlderAll Ages
1
Fall
3,156.5
Motor Vehicle Traffic Crashes - Motor Vehicle Occupant
1,848.2
Fall
1,409.6
Fall
2,095.3
Fall
5,588.1
Fall
2,820.5
2
Struck by/Against
1,824.5
Struck by/Against
1,412.5
Motor Vehicle Traffic Crashes - Motor Vehicle Occupant
1,381.1
Motor Vehicle Traffic Crashes - Motor Vehicle Occupant
833.4
Struck by/Against
577.8
Struck by/Against
1,043.7
3
Overexertion
688.0
Fall
1,316.6
Struck by/Against
1,098.7
Struck by/Against
679.5
Motor Vehicle Traffic Crashes - Motor Vehicle Occupant
478.3
Motor Vehicle Traffic Crashes - Motor Vehicle Occupant
920.7
4
Bites and Stings - Non-Venomous
548.1
Cut/Pierce
856.8
Overexertion
794.7
Overexertion
581.8
Overexertion
359.5
Overexertion
626.6
5
Motor Vehicle Traffic Crashes - Motor Vehicle Occupant
537.1
Overexertion
811.3
Cut/Pierce
726.7
Cut/Pierce
455.7
Cut/Pierce
316.4
Cut/Pierce
533.5
6
Cut/Pierce
490.2
Bites and Stings - Non-Venomous
378.0
Bites and Stings - Non-Venomous
355.7
Bites and Stings - Non-Venomous
269.1
Bites and Stings - Non-Venomous
192.9
Bites and Stings - Non-Venomous
337.0
7
Foreign Body
374.9
Motor Vehicle Traffic Crashes - Motorcyclist
160.3
Poisoning - Drug
183.9
Foreign Body
112.3
Foreign Body
106.7
Foreign Body
177.1
8
Poisoning - Drug
150.4
Foreign Body
153.9
Foreign Body
160.1
Poisoning - Drug
107.0
Natural/Environmental
72.4
Poisoning - Drug
129.0
9
Hot Object/Substance
115.4
Poisoning - Drug
153.2
Motor Vehicle Traffic Crashes - Motorcyclist
107.9
Natural/Environmental
63.7
Poisoning - Drug
63.0
Hot Object/Substance
73.4
10
Pedalcyclist
113.8
Motor Vehicle Non-Traffic Crashes
117.7
Hot Object/Substance
84.7
Motor Vehicle Traffic Crashes - Motorcyclist
59.4
Pedalcyclist
44.2
Natural/Environmental
67.8

1/31/2026 1:49:11 AM

Data Note(s)


FLHealthCHARTS.gov is provided by the Florida Department of Health, Division of Public Health Statistics and Performance Management.

Data Source: Florida Agency for Health Care Administration

  • Rates are per 100,000 population. Rates based on total counts less than 20 may be unstable; use with caution.

  • Blank data fields indicate results have been suppressed because counts are between 1 and 4.

  • Data are for Florida residents based on county of residence.

  • Data reflects hospitalizations or emergency department visits rather than the number of people. Data may contain multiple hospitalizations or emergency department visits for the same person/injury event due to hospital transfers, readmissions, and follow-up visits. Therefore, the data reflects the number of hospitalizations or emergency department visits and not the number of people injured. Visits to the emergency department that result in admission to that same hospital are counted as hospitalizations.

  • Hospital and emergency department visit data do not include Veteran Affairs (VA) and other federal hospitals, rehabilitation centers, and psychiatric hospitals.

  • Each hospitalization or emergency department visit record will be counted in the ICD-10 injury mechanism and intent first listed in the principal diagnosis field, 3 external cause of morbidity fields, and 30 other diagnosis fields. Each record will only be counted as their first listed injury mechanism and intent. Injury mechanisms are mutually exclusive of each other. Injury hospitalizations or emergency department visits that are not coded to a mechanism and intent are labelled 'Not E-Coded.' These records are counted as Other Mechanism in the All Intent category, but not in the Unintentional, Self-Harm, Assault, Other, or Undetermined Intent categories.

  • Only hospitalizations and emergency department visits that ended in a non-fatal discharge are included in this report.

  • Effective October 1, 2015, the ICD 9th Revision Clinical Modification (ICD-9-CM) transitioned to ICD 10th Revision Clinical Modification (ICD-10-CM). Data before October 2015 use ICD-9-CM; starting in October 2015, data use ICD-10-CM. Consequently, increases or decreases starting in 2015 may not be due to changes in disease trends but due to changes in coding.