Risky behavior during stair descent for young adults: Differences in men versus women.

Injuries commonly occur on stairs, with high injury rates in young adults, especially young women. High injury rates could result from physiological and/or behavioral differences; this study focuses on behaviors. The purposes of this observational study were (1) to quantify young adult behaviors dur...

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Main Authors: HyeYoung Cho, Amanda J Arnold, Chuyi Cui, Zihan Yang, Tim Becker, Ashwini Kulkarni, Anvesh Naik, Shirley Rietdyk
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2023-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0288438
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author HyeYoung Cho
Amanda J Arnold
Chuyi Cui
Zihan Yang
Tim Becker
Ashwini Kulkarni
Anvesh Naik
Shirley Rietdyk
author_facet HyeYoung Cho
Amanda J Arnold
Chuyi Cui
Zihan Yang
Tim Becker
Ashwini Kulkarni
Anvesh Naik
Shirley Rietdyk
author_sort HyeYoung Cho
collection DOAJ
description Injuries commonly occur on stairs, with high injury rates in young adults, especially young women. High injury rates could result from physiological and/or behavioral differences; this study focuses on behaviors. The purposes of this observational study were (1) to quantify young adult behaviors during stair descent and (2) to identify differences in stair descent behavior for young adult men versus women. Young adult pedestrians (N = 2,400, 1,470 men and 930 women) were videotaped during descent of two indoor campus staircases, a short staircase (2 steps) and a long staircase (17 steps). Behaviors during stair descent were coded by experimenters. Risky behaviors observed on the short staircase included: No one used the handrail, 16.1% used an electronic device, and 16.4% had in-person conversations. On the long staircase: 64.8% of pedestrians did not use the handrail, 11.9% used an electronic device, and 14.5% had in-person conversations. Risky behaviors observed more in women included: less likely to use the handrail (long staircase), more likely to carry an item in their hands (both staircases), more likely to engage in conversation (both staircases), and more likely to wear sandals or heels (both staircases) (p≤0.05). Protective behaviors observed more in women included: less likely to skip steps (both staircases), and more likely to look at treads during transition steps (long staircase) (p≤0.05). The number of co-occurring risky behaviors was higher in women: 1.9 vs 2.3, for men vs women, respectively (p<0.001). Five pedestrians lost balance but did not fall; four of these pedestrians lost balance on the top step and all five had their gaze diverted from the steps at the time balance was lost. The observed behaviors may be related to the high injury rate of stair-related falls in young adults, and young women specifically.
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spelling doaj.art-b5fbaf6dc9ff4539a16840eb6bda0cda2023-10-21T05:31:15ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032023-01-01187e028843810.1371/journal.pone.0288438Risky behavior during stair descent for young adults: Differences in men versus women.HyeYoung ChoAmanda J ArnoldChuyi CuiZihan YangTim BeckerAshwini KulkarniAnvesh NaikShirley RietdykInjuries commonly occur on stairs, with high injury rates in young adults, especially young women. High injury rates could result from physiological and/or behavioral differences; this study focuses on behaviors. The purposes of this observational study were (1) to quantify young adult behaviors during stair descent and (2) to identify differences in stair descent behavior for young adult men versus women. Young adult pedestrians (N = 2,400, 1,470 men and 930 women) were videotaped during descent of two indoor campus staircases, a short staircase (2 steps) and a long staircase (17 steps). Behaviors during stair descent were coded by experimenters. Risky behaviors observed on the short staircase included: No one used the handrail, 16.1% used an electronic device, and 16.4% had in-person conversations. On the long staircase: 64.8% of pedestrians did not use the handrail, 11.9% used an electronic device, and 14.5% had in-person conversations. Risky behaviors observed more in women included: less likely to use the handrail (long staircase), more likely to carry an item in their hands (both staircases), more likely to engage in conversation (both staircases), and more likely to wear sandals or heels (both staircases) (p≤0.05). Protective behaviors observed more in women included: less likely to skip steps (both staircases), and more likely to look at treads during transition steps (long staircase) (p≤0.05). The number of co-occurring risky behaviors was higher in women: 1.9 vs 2.3, for men vs women, respectively (p<0.001). Five pedestrians lost balance but did not fall; four of these pedestrians lost balance on the top step and all five had their gaze diverted from the steps at the time balance was lost. The observed behaviors may be related to the high injury rate of stair-related falls in young adults, and young women specifically.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0288438
spellingShingle HyeYoung Cho
Amanda J Arnold
Chuyi Cui
Zihan Yang
Tim Becker
Ashwini Kulkarni
Anvesh Naik
Shirley Rietdyk
Risky behavior during stair descent for young adults: Differences in men versus women.
PLoS ONE
title Risky behavior during stair descent for young adults: Differences in men versus women.
title_full Risky behavior during stair descent for young adults: Differences in men versus women.
title_fullStr Risky behavior during stair descent for young adults: Differences in men versus women.
title_full_unstemmed Risky behavior during stair descent for young adults: Differences in men versus women.
title_short Risky behavior during stair descent for young adults: Differences in men versus women.
title_sort risky behavior during stair descent for young adults differences in men versus women
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0288438
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