(Courtesy of Detroit Free Press)
by Michelle Healy - USA Today
Gunshot-related injuries are well known as a leading cause of death
among children and adolescents, but other aspects of the health toll
they inflict get much less attention, including injury severity, the
need for major surgical intervention, and high care costs, a new study
says.
The burden of these adverse outcomes is particularly common for older
adolescent males (ages 15 to 19), who accounted for the majority
(83.2%) of children who suffered gunshot injuries in the study reported
in November's Pediatrics, published online today.
The study provides "a broader look" at the disproportionate and
negative effects beyond fatalities that are associated with firearm use,
says emergency medicine physician Craig Newgard, lead study author.
"If we focus on just fatalities, we're only looking at the tip of
the iceberg," says Newgard, associate professor and director of the
Center for Policy and Research in Emergency Medicine at the Oregon
Health & Science University in Portland.
According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, gunshot
injuries rank second only to motor vehicle crashes as a cause of death
for children ages 15 to 19. From 2001 to 2010, 29,331 children ages 0 to
19 years died of gunshot-related injuries; another 155,000 were injured
seriously enough to undergo treatment in emergency departments.
In the new study, researchers analyzed data collected over three
years on 49,983 kids and teens evaluated by emergency medical service
(EMS) agencies transporting to 93 hospitals in five regions of the West -
Portland, Ore./Vancouver, Wash. (four counties); King County, Wash.;
Sacramento (two counties); Santa Clara, Calif. (two counties); and
Denver County, Colo.
Gunshot wounds accounted for just 1% of injured children but were associated with 21% of deaths after injury.
Although the rate of gunshot-related injuries (8 per 100,000
children) was "relatively small" compared with six other causes of
injuries studied (including cuts, falls and motor vehicle crashes), they
had dramatically higher adverse outcomes.
Specifically, children wounded by gunshots had the highest
proportion of serious injuries (23%), major surgeries (32%) and deaths
in hospitals (8%), along with the highest acute care costs, $28,510 per
patient. The next highest care costs, $15,566, were for injuries
sustained from being struck by a motor vehicle.
"In every metric that we looked at, the front-runner far and away for
worst outcome and greatest impact was gunshot-related injuries," says
Newgard.
Given that the data used represents just five regions of the western
part of the country, the findings likely underestimate the national
picture, he adds.
Overall, "The study highlights the highly lethal nature of
firearm-related injuries among children," says Patrick Carter, an
emergency physician and injury researcher at the University of Michigan
Injury Center in Ann Arbor. Carter was not involved in the new study.
It also reinforces the need for additional research into effective
approaches to reduce individual and environmental risk factors along
with effective public health interventions, Carter says.
Read the original story: Death tallies belie true impact of kids' gun injuries
Reference Link: http://www.freep.com/usatoday/article/2955557
No comments:
Post a Comment