Firearm injuries in Missouri

Author:

Rivara Frederick P.,Hink Ashley B.,Kuhls Deborah,Banks Samantha,Agoubi Lauren L.,Kirkendoll ShelbieORCID,Winchester Alex,Hoeft Christopher,Patel Bhavin,Nathens Avery

Abstract

Firearm deaths continue to be a major public health problem, but the number of non-fatal firearm injuries and the characteristics of patients and injuries is not well known. The American College of Surgeons Committee on Trauma, with support from the National Collaborative on Gun Violence Research, leveraged an existing data system to capture lethal and non-lethal injuries, including patients treated and discharged from the emergency department and collect additional data on firearm injuries that present to trauma centers. In 2020, Missouri had the 4th highest firearm mortality rate in the country at 23.75/100,000 population compared to 13.58/100,000 for the US overall. We examined the characteristics of patients from Missouri with firearm injuries in this cross-sectional study. Of the overall 17,395 patients, 1,336 (7.7%) were treated at one of the 11 participating trauma centers in Missouri during the 12-month study period. Patients were mostly male and much more likely to be Black and uninsured than residents in the state as a whole. Nearly three-fourths of the injuries were due to assaults, and overall 7.7% died. Few patients received post-discharge services.

Funder

National Collaborative on Gun Violence Research

Publisher

Public Library of Science (PLoS)

Subject

Multidisciplinary

Reference22 articles.

1. National Violent Death Reporting System. 2023 [cited 2023]. Available from: https://www.cdc.gov/violenceprevention/datasources/nvdrs/index.html.

2. Incidence, Distribution, and Lethality of Firearm Injuries in California From 2005 to 2015.;SA Spitzer;JAMA network open,2020

3. US Emergency Department Encounters for Firearm Injuries According to Presentation at Trauma vs Nontrauma Centers.;E Coupet;JAMA Surg,2019

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