Giannouchos Theodoros, Kum Hye-Chung, Rochford Hannah
The University of Alabama Birmingham, School of Public Health, Health Policy & Organization, Birmingham, Alabama.
Texas A&M University, School of Public Health, Health Policy & Management, Population Informatics Lab., College Station, Texas.
Am J Prev Med. 2025 Feb;68(2):281-288. doi: 10.1016/j.amepre.2024.10.005. Epub 2024 Oct 15.
The mortality, long-term morbidity, and exacerbated healthcare needs due to firearm injury in the U.S. are significant and growing. However, the relationship between exposure to a nonfatal firearm injury and long-term emergency department (ED) utilization is poorly understood. This study estimates the association between exposure to a nonfatal firearm injury and ED utilization in the subsequent year.
Using all-payer ED data among nonelderly adults in Georgia and New York, all ED visits for nonfatal firearm injuries from 2017 to 2018 were identified. Sociodemographic, clinical, and contextual characteristics between nonfatal firearm injury ED patients and the broader population of ED users were compared. ED utilization in the year following a nonfatal firearm injury relative to ED use in the year before and compared with ED use by a propensity score matched control group was examined using Poisson and negative binomial multivariable regressions. Analyses were performed in 2024.
Nonfatal firearm injury ED patients were disproportionately male, younger, non-Hispanic Black, uninsured, and residents of areas with low median income and high firearm ownership. Compared to a matched control group, multivariable analyses indicated that nonfatal firearm injury ED patients had significantly higher risks of having hospital admissions through the ED (aRR: 1.42), all-cause injury-related ED visits (aRR: 1.47), nonfirearm injury-related ED visits (aRR: 1.26), and additional nonfatal firearm injury-related ED visits (aRR: 325.45) in the subsequent year (p<0.001 for all). About one in every eight ED users with a firearm-related injury at index also sought ED care for another nonfatal firearm injury within 1 year.
Nonfatal firearm-related injuries contribute to preventable harm, health inequity, and increased ED utilization.
在美国,枪支伤害导致的死亡率、长期发病率以及医疗保健需求的加剧都很显著且呈上升趋势。然而,非致命枪支伤害暴露与长期急诊室(ED)利用率之间的关系却鲜为人知。本研究估计了非致命枪支伤害暴露与次年急诊室利用率之间的关联。
利用佐治亚州和纽约州非老年成年人的全支付者急诊室数据,确定了2017年至2018年所有非致命枪支伤害的急诊室就诊情况。比较了非致命枪支伤害急诊患者与更广泛的急诊使用者群体之间的社会人口统计学、临床和背景特征。使用泊松和负二项式多变量回归分析,研究了非致命枪支伤害后一年的急诊室利用率相对于前一年的急诊室使用情况,并与倾向评分匹配对照组的急诊室使用情况进行了比较。分析于2024年进行。
非致命枪支伤害急诊患者中男性、年轻人、非西班牙裔黑人、未参保者以及中等收入低且枪支拥有率高的地区居民比例过高。与匹配对照组相比,多变量分析表明,非致命枪支伤害急诊患者在次年通过急诊室住院的风险显著更高(调整后风险比[aRR]:1.42),全因伤害相关的急诊就诊风险(aRR:1.47),非枪支伤害相关的急诊就诊风险(aRR:1.26),以及额外的非致命枪支伤害相关的急诊就诊风险(aRR:325.45)(所有p<0.001)。约八分之一在索引时因枪支相关伤害就诊的急诊使用者在1年内也因另一起非致命枪支伤害寻求急诊护理。
非致命枪支相关伤害导致了可预防的伤害、健康不平等以及急诊室利用率的增加。