Preinjury and Event-Related Characteristics of Pediatric Firearm Injuries: The American College of Surgeons Firearm Study, United States, March 2021‒February 2022

Author:

Flynn-O’Brien Katherine T.1ORCID,Sathya Chethan1ORCID,Kotagal Meera1,Banks Samantha1ORCID,Agoubi Lauren L.1ORCID,Kuhls Deborah A.1,Nathens Avery1,Hink Ashley B.1,Rivara Frederick P.1

Affiliation:

1. Katherine T. Flynn-O’Brien is with the Department of Surgery, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee. Chethan Sathya is with the Division of Pediatric Surgery, Cohen Children’s Medical Center, New Hyde Park, NY. Meera Kotagal is with the Division of Pediatric General and Thoracic Surgery, Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center, Cincinnati, OH. Samantha Banks is with the Firearm Injury and Policy Research Program, University of Washington, Seattle. Lauren L. Agoubi is with the Department of...

Abstract

Objectives. To assess differences in contextual factors by intent among pediatric firearm injury patients and determine factors associated with data missingness. Methods. We retrospectively queried the American College of Surgeons Firearm Study database (March 1, 2021–February 28, 2022) for patients aged 18 years or younger. We stratified preinjury, firearm-related, and event-related factors by intent and compared them by using Fisher exact, χ2, or 1-way analysis of variance testing. Secondary analysis estimated the adjusted odds of missingness by using generalized linear modeling with binominal logit link. Results. Among 17 395 patients, 2974 (17.1%) were aged 18 years or younger; 1966 (66.1%) were injured by assault, 579 (19.5%) unintentionally, and 76 (2.6%) by self-inflicted means. Most contextual factors differed by intent, including proportion of youths with previous adverse childhood experiences, mental illness, and violent assaults or injury, firearm type and access, perpetrator relationship, and injury location. In adjusted analyses, age, trauma center designation, intent, and admission status were associated with missingness. Conclusions. Contextual factors related to pediatric firearm injury vary by intent. Specific predictors associated with missingness may inform improved future data collection. Public Health Implications. Contextual factors related to pediatric firearm injury can be obtained in a systematic manner nationally to inform targeted interventions. ( Am J Public Health. 2024;114(10):1097–1109. https://doi.org/10.2105/AJPH.2024.307754 )

Publisher

American Public Health Association

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