Kwon Eustina G, Nehra Deepika, Hall Matthew, Herrera-Escobar Juan P, Rivara Frederick P, Rice-Townsend Samuel E
Department of General and Thoracic Surgery, Seattle Children's Hospital, University of Washington, Seattle, WA.
Division of Trauma, Burn, and Critical Care Surgery, Harborview Medical Center, University of Washington, Seattle, WA.
Surgery. 2023 Aug;174(2):356-362. doi: 10.1016/j.surg.2023.04.011. Epub 2023 May 19.
Community-level factors can profoundly impact children's health, including the risk of violent injury. This study's objective was to understand the relationship between the Childhood Opportunity Index and pediatric firearm injury owing to interpersonal violence compared with a motor vehicle crash.
All pediatric patients (<18 years) who presented with an initial encounter with a firearm injury or motor vehicle crash between 2016 to 2021 were identified from 35 children's hospitals included in the Pediatric Health Information System database. The child-specific community-level vulnerability was determined by the Childhood Opportunity Index, a composite score of neighborhood opportunity level data specific to pediatric populations.
We identified 67,407 patients treated for injuries related to motor vehicle crashes (n = 61,527) or firearms (n = 5,880). The overall cohort had a mean age of 9.3 (standard deviation 5.4) years; 50.0% were male patients, 44.0% non-Hispanic Black, and were 60.8% publicly insured. Compared with motor vehicle crash injuries, patients with firearm-related injuries were older (12.2 vs 9.0 years), more likely to be male patients (77.7% vs 47.4%), non-Hispanic Black (63.5% vs 42.1%), and had public insurance (76.4 vs 59.3%; all P < .001). In multivariable analysis, children living in communities with lower Childhood Opportunity Index levels were more likely to present with firearm injury than those living in communities with a very high Childhood Opportunity Index. The odds increased as the Childhood Opportunity Index level decreased (odds ratio 1.33, 1.60, 1.73, 2.00 for high, moderate, low, and very low Childhood Opportunity Index, respectively; all P ≤ .001).
Children from lower-Childhood Opportunity Index communities are disproportionately impacted by firearm violence, and these findings have important implications for both clinical care and public health policy.
社区层面的因素会对儿童健康产生深远影响,包括遭受暴力伤害的风险。本研究的目的是了解儿童机会指数与人际暴力导致的儿童枪支伤害之间的关系,并与机动车碰撞伤害进行比较。
从儿科健康信息系统数据库中的35家儿童医院识别出2016年至2021年间首次因枪支伤害或机动车碰撞就诊的所有儿科患者(<18岁)。儿童特定的社区层面脆弱性由儿童机会指数确定,该指数是针对儿科人群的邻里机会水平数据的综合得分。
我们识别出67407名因机动车碰撞(n = 61527)或枪支(n = 5880)相关伤害接受治疗的患者。整个队列的平均年龄为9.3岁(标准差5.4);50.0%为男性患者,44.0%为非西班牙裔黑人,60.8%有公共保险。与机动车碰撞伤害患者相比,枪支相关伤害患者年龄更大(12.2岁对9.0岁),更可能为男性患者(77.7%对47.4%)、非西班牙裔黑人(63.5%对42.1%),且有公共保险(76.4%对59.3%;所有P <.001)。在多变量分析中,与生活在儿童机会指数水平非常高的社区的儿童相比,生活在儿童机会指数水平较低社区的儿童更有可能出现枪支伤害。随着儿童机会指数水平降低,几率增加(儿童机会指数高、中、低和非常低时的比值比分别为1.33、1.60、1.73、2.00;所有P≤.001)。
来自儿童机会指数较低社区的儿童受枪支暴力影响的比例过高,这些发现对临床护理和公共卫生政策都具有重要意义。