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Objective: Firearm injuries are a leading cause of morbidity among youth, yet acute pain management practices have not been well characterized. Our objective was to evaluate acute pain medication administration by key sociodemographic characteristics and injury severity after nonfatal firearm injuries.
Methods: We performed a retrospective cross-sectional analysis utilizing Pediatric Health Information System at 40 US children's hospitals from 2016 to 2021. We included inpatient and emergency department (ED) only encounters for patients 0-21 years old with a firearm injury diagnosis. The main outcome was administration of analgesic medications: none, nonopioid only, or at least 1 opioid. We included sociodemographic and injury severity score. Multivariable logistic regression was utilized to determine characteristics associated with the outcome.
Results: We included 4924 patients with nonfatal firearm injuries. By ED discharge versus admission, 39.0% versus 3.5% received no analgesia. For the 2522 patients discharged from the ED, younger children were more likely to receive no analgesia. Non-Hispanic White and Hispanic patients were more likely to receive no analgesia compared to non-Hispanic Black patients (adjusted odds ratios [aOR] 1.67 [95% confidence intervals 1.31, 2.31]; aOR 1.53 [1.18, 1.98], respectively). Receipt of opioids was lower among 5-9-year-old patients (aOR 0.40 [0.29, 0.54]), females (aOR 0.77 [0.62, 0.97]), and non-Hispanic White (aOR 0.59 [0.62, 0.75) and Hispanic patients (aOR 0.52 [0.40, 0.67]).
Conclusions: Among youth with nonfatal firearm injuries, analgesia administration varied greatest in the ED-discharged population. This suggests a need for further investigation into pain management practices focused on differences and potential undertreatment of pain in youth with nonfatal firearm injury.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.acap.2025.102877 | DOI Listing |
JAMA Psychiatry
August 2025
Department of Health Care Policy, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.
Inj Epidemiol
August 2025
Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Background: Endemic levels of community firearm violence in United States cities disproportionately burden certain sociodemographic groups. Nonfatal injuries are an understudied aspect of firearm violence. Police data in a large and heterogenous place like New York City (NYC) provide the unique opportunity to use a single data source to measure fatal and nonfatal community firearm violence.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPediatr Emerg Care
July 2025
Department of Surgery, NYU Grossman School of Medicine, New York, NY.
Objectives: We aimed to describe pediatric firearm incidents treated at 6 New York City public trauma hospitals over a 5-year period.
Methods: We conducted a retrospective, multi-institutional, descriptive study of firearm-related incidents among patients below 18 years treated at 6 municipal trauma centers in New York City from July 1, 2016, to June 30, 2021. We used trauma registries, electronic health records (EHR), and geospatial analysis, supplemented with Gun Violence Archive (GVA) and New York Police Department data to characterize and map incidents, excluding missing data.
Inj Prev
July 2025
Center to Improve Veteran Involvement in Care (CIVIC), VA Portland Health Care System, Portland, Oregon, USA.
Objective: Veterans are disproportionately affected by firearm injury (FAI). Beyond the human toll of FAIs, they also strain healthcare systems. This study examined excess costs from FAIs incurred by the Veterans Affairs (VA) Healthcare System among a cohort of VA-using Veterans.
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