Long-term mortality in pediatric firearm assault survivors: A multicenter, retrospective, comparative cohort study

Shaahinfar A, Yen IH, Alter HJ, Gildengorin G, Pan S-MJ, Betts JM, Fahimi J. Long-term mortality in pediatric firearm assault survivors: A multicenter, retrospective, comparative cohort study. Academic Emergency Medicine. 2018;25(12):1447–1457.

Abstract

Objectives: The objective was to determine whether children surviving to hospital discharge after firearm assault (FA) and nonfirearm assault (NFA) are at increased risk of mortality relative to survivors of unintentional trauma (UT). Secondarily, the objective was to elucidate the factors associated with long-term mortality after pediatric trauma. Methods: This was a multicenter, retrospective cohort study of pediatric patients aged 0 to 16 years who presented to the three trauma centers in San Francisco and Alameda counties, California, between January 2000 and December 2009 after 1) FA, 2) NFA, and 3) UT. The Social Security Death Master File and the California Department of Public Health Vital Statistics (2000–2014) were queried through December 31, 2014, to identify those who died after surviving their initial hospitalization and to delineate cause of death. Multivariate Cox proportional hazards regression was performed to determine associations between exposure to assault and long-term mortality.
Last updated on 07/21/2022