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Mortality After Adolescent Firearm Injury: Effect of Trauma Center Designation

Authors :
Gary W. Nace
Michael L. Nance
Myron Allukian
Valerie L. Luks
Matthew A. Goldshore
Megha G. Nayyar
Robert A. Swendiman
Justin S. Hatchimonji
Source :
The Journal of adolescent health : official publication of the Society for Adolescent Medicine. 68(5)
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

To determine the incidence and outcomes of firearm injuries in adolescents and the effect of trauma center (TC) designation on their mortality.The National Trauma Data Bank (2010-2016) was queried for all encounters involving adolescents aged 13-16 years with firearm injuries. Multivariable logistic regression was employed to determine the association of covariates with mortality (α = .05). Propensity score matching was also used to explore the relationship between TC designation and mortality.A total of 9,029 adolescents met inclusion criteria. Patients aged 15 and 16 years compromised 77.8% of the cohort and were more often male (87.9% vs. 80.6%, p.001), black (63.8% vs. 56.1%, p.001), injured in the abdomen (25.4% vs. 22.4%, p = .007) or extremities (62.3% vs. 56.7%, p.001), and incurred severe injuries (54.5% vs. 50.9%, p = .004) versus 13- and 14-year-old patients. Younger patients were more often injured in the head/neck (23.8% vs. 20.5%, p = .001). Multivariable logistic regression demonstrated no difference in mortality between age groups. Poor neurologic presentation, severe injury, abdominal, chest, and head injuries were all associated with an increased odds of death. Odds of mortality were 2.88 times higher at adult TCs compared to pediatric TCs (CI: 1.55-5.36, p = .001). However, using a 1:1 propensity score matching model, no difference in mortality was found between TC types (p = NS).Variability exists in outcomes for adolescents after firearm injuries. Understanding and identifying the potential differences between pediatric and adult TCs managing adolescent firearm victims may improve survival in all treatment venues, but these data support patients being treated at the closest available TC.

Details

ISSN :
18791972
Volume :
68
Issue :
5
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
The Journal of adolescent health : official publication of the Society for Adolescent Medicine
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....54aabbda26fc3e3b321e4853c60a5826