A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal
Factors associated with all-cause mortality and morbidity of motorcycle crash-related neurological and musculoskeletal injuries in Uganda: the MOTOR cluster randomised trial ancillary study
Authors: Lule, Herman; Mugerwa, Micheal; Abio, Anne; Oguttu, Benson; Kakeeto, Andrew; Asiimwe, Daniel; Lekuya, Hervé Monka; Ssebuufu, Robinson; Kyamanywa, Patrick; Bärnighausen, Till; Wilson, Michael L.; Posti, Jussi P.
Publisher: BMJ
Publication year: 2026
Journal: Injury Prevention
ISSN: 1353-8047
eISSN: 1475-5785
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1136/ip-2025-045737
Publication's open availability at the time of reporting: Open Access
Publication channel's open availability : Partially Open Access publication channel
Web address : https://doi.org/10.1136/ip-2025-045737
Self-archived copy’s web address: https://research.utu.fi/converis/portal/detail/Publication/508432050
Self-archived copy's licence: CC BY NC
Self-archived copy's version: Publisher`s PDF
Introduction
This study examined the factors linked to all-cause mortality and morbidity from neurological and musculoskeletal injuries during motorcycle accidents in Uganda.
Methods
The study was part of a two-armed, parallel, multi-period, cluster-randomised controlled trial of 1003 motorcycle crash victims. Morbidity was assessed using various scoring systems, and mixed effects regression models were employed for analysis.
Results
Ninety-day all-cause mortality was 9.2% (82/887). Factors associated with mortality included referral-to-dispatch >1 hour (OR 4.215 (1.802–9.858), p=0.001), Kampala Trauma Score (KTS) ≤6 (OR 7.696 (1.932–30.653), p=0.004), GCS 9–12 (OR 3.432 (1.194–9.870), p=0.022), GCS ≤8 (OR 6.919 (2.212–21.645), p=0.001), intra-axial lesions (OR 78.647 (9.871–626.587), p<0.001), extra-axial lesions (OR 11.933 (1.386–102.750), p=0.024), skull fracture (OR 11.366, (1.197–107.977), p=0.034) and craniotomy (OR 0.260 (0.095–0.706), p=0.008).
A percentage of 14.5% had unfavourable Glasgow Outcome Scale (1–3); associated factors included increasing age (OR 1.02 (1.013–1.045, p<.001), multiple injuries (OR 4.559 (1.185–17.531), p=0.027), KTS 7-8 (OR 2.755 (1.285–5.906), p=0.009), KTS ≤6 (OR 7.551 (2.815–20.255), p=0.001), GCS 9-12 (OR 4.07 (1.901–8.719), p=0.001), GCS ≤8 (OR 13.779 (5.643–33.645), p<0.001) and craniotomy (OR 0.149 (0.075–0.295), p<0.001).
Factors associated with unfavourable patient-reported musculoskeletal outcomes included being married (OR 1.984 (1.322–2.976), p=0.001), multiple injuries (OR 1.762 (1.001–3.100), p=0.049) and enrolment after the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic (OR 2.095 (1.199–3.659), p=0.009].
Conclusions
The key determinants of mortality and adverse neurological and musculoskeletal injury outcomes observed in this study are essential for establishing core outcome sets in future research and predictive models.
Downloadable publication This is an electronic reprint of the original article. |
Funding information in the publication:
The study was supported through funding and fellowships to HL provided by the University of Turku Graduate School, Turku University Hospital (TYKS) Foundation, TYKS Neurocenter and the Center for Health Equity in Surgery and Anaesthesia (CHESA) at the University of California San Francisco (UCSF), as well as through grants to JPP from the Research Council of Finland and Sigrid Jusélius Foundation. The funders did not play any role in the design, execution or reporting of the research findings.