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Nonfatal Injuries Sustained in Mass Shootings in the US, 2012–2019: Injury Diagnosis Matrix, Incident Context, and Public Health Considerations

INTRODUCTION: The epidemic of gun violence in the United States (US) is exacerbated by frequent mass shootings. In 2021, there were 698 mass shootings in the US, resulting in 705 deaths and 2,830 injuries. This is a companion paper to a publication in JAMA Network Open, in which the nonfatal outcome...

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Autores principales: Czaja, Matthew P., Kraus, Chadd K., Phyo, Su, Olivieri, Patrick, Mederos, Dalier R., Puente, Ivan, Mohammed, Salman, Berkeley, Ross P., Slattery, David, Gildea, Thomas H., Hardman, Claire, Palmer, Brandi, Whitmill, Melissa L., Aluyen, Una, Pinnow, Jeffery M, Young, Amanda, Eastin, Carly D., Kester, Nurani M., Works, Kaitlyn R., Pfeffer, Andrew N., Keller, Aleksander W., Tobias, Adam, Li, Benjamin, Yorkgitis, Brian, Saadat, Soheil, Langdorf, Mark I.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Department of Emergency Medicine, University of California, Irvine School of Medicine 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10284525/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37278791
http://dx.doi.org/10.5811/westjem.58395
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author Czaja, Matthew P.
Kraus, Chadd K.
Phyo, Su
Olivieri, Patrick
Mederos, Dalier R.
Puente, Ivan
Mohammed, Salman
Berkeley, Ross P.
Slattery, David
Gildea, Thomas H.
Hardman, Claire
Palmer, Brandi
Whitmill, Melissa L.
Aluyen, Una
Pinnow, Jeffery M
Young, Amanda
Eastin, Carly D.
Kester, Nurani M.
Works, Kaitlyn R.
Pfeffer, Andrew N.
Keller, Aleksander W.
Tobias, Adam
Li, Benjamin
Yorkgitis, Brian
Saadat, Soheil
Langdorf, Mark I.
author_facet Czaja, Matthew P.
Kraus, Chadd K.
Phyo, Su
Olivieri, Patrick
Mederos, Dalier R.
Puente, Ivan
Mohammed, Salman
Berkeley, Ross P.
Slattery, David
Gildea, Thomas H.
Hardman, Claire
Palmer, Brandi
Whitmill, Melissa L.
Aluyen, Una
Pinnow, Jeffery M
Young, Amanda
Eastin, Carly D.
Kester, Nurani M.
Works, Kaitlyn R.
Pfeffer, Andrew N.
Keller, Aleksander W.
Tobias, Adam
Li, Benjamin
Yorkgitis, Brian
Saadat, Soheil
Langdorf, Mark I.
author_sort Czaja, Matthew P.
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: The epidemic of gun violence in the United States (US) is exacerbated by frequent mass shootings. In 2021, there were 698 mass shootings in the US, resulting in 705 deaths and 2,830 injuries. This is a companion paper to a publication in JAMA Network Open, in which the nonfatal outcomes of victims of mass shootings have been only partially described. METHODS: We gathered clinical and logistic information from 31 hospitals in the US about 403 survivors of 13 mass shootings, each event involving greater than 10 injuries, from 2012–19. Local champions in emergency medicine and trauma surgery provided clinical data from electronic health records within 24 hours of a mass shooting. We organized descriptive statistics of individual-level diagnoses recorded in medical records using International Classification of Diseases codes, according to the Barell Injury Diagnosis Matrix (BIDM), a standardized tool that classifies 12 types of injuries within 36 body regions. RESULTS: Of the 403 patients who were evaluated at a hospital, 364 sustained physical injuries—252 by gunshot wound (GSW) and 112 by non-ballistic trauma—and 39 were uninjured. Fifty patients had 75 psychiatric diagnoses. Nearly 10% of victims came to the hospital for symptoms triggered by, but not directly related to, the shooting, or for exacerbations of underlying conditions. There were 362 gunshot wounds recorded in the Barell Matrix (1.44 per patient). The Emergency Severity Index (ESI) distribution was skewed toward higher acuity than typical for an emergency department (ED), with 15.1% ESI 1 and 17.6% ESI 2 patients. Semi-automatic firearms were used in 100% of these civilian public mass shootings, with 50 total weapons for 13 shootings (Route 91 Harvest Festival, Las Vegas. 24). Assailant motivations were reported to be associated with hate crimes in 23.1%. CONCLUSION: Survivors of mass shootings have substantial morbidity and characteristic injury distribution, but 37% of victims had no GSW. Law enforcement, emergency medical systems, and hospital and ED disaster planners can use this information for injury mitigation and public policy planning. The BIDM is useful to organize data regarding gun violence injuries. We call for additional research funding to prevent and mitigate interpersonal firearm injuries, and for the National Violent Death Reporting System to expand tracking of injuries, their sequelae, complications, and societal costs.
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spelling pubmed-102845252023-06-22 Nonfatal Injuries Sustained in Mass Shootings in the US, 2012–2019: Injury Diagnosis Matrix, Incident Context, and Public Health Considerations Czaja, Matthew P. Kraus, Chadd K. Phyo, Su Olivieri, Patrick Mederos, Dalier R. Puente, Ivan Mohammed, Salman Berkeley, Ross P. Slattery, David Gildea, Thomas H. Hardman, Claire Palmer, Brandi Whitmill, Melissa L. Aluyen, Una Pinnow, Jeffery M Young, Amanda Eastin, Carly D. Kester, Nurani M. Works, Kaitlyn R. Pfeffer, Andrew N. Keller, Aleksander W. Tobias, Adam Li, Benjamin Yorkgitis, Brian Saadat, Soheil Langdorf, Mark I. West J Emerg Med Original Research INTRODUCTION: The epidemic of gun violence in the United States (US) is exacerbated by frequent mass shootings. In 2021, there were 698 mass shootings in the US, resulting in 705 deaths and 2,830 injuries. This is a companion paper to a publication in JAMA Network Open, in which the nonfatal outcomes of victims of mass shootings have been only partially described. METHODS: We gathered clinical and logistic information from 31 hospitals in the US about 403 survivors of 13 mass shootings, each event involving greater than 10 injuries, from 2012–19. Local champions in emergency medicine and trauma surgery provided clinical data from electronic health records within 24 hours of a mass shooting. We organized descriptive statistics of individual-level diagnoses recorded in medical records using International Classification of Diseases codes, according to the Barell Injury Diagnosis Matrix (BIDM), a standardized tool that classifies 12 types of injuries within 36 body regions. RESULTS: Of the 403 patients who were evaluated at a hospital, 364 sustained physical injuries—252 by gunshot wound (GSW) and 112 by non-ballistic trauma—and 39 were uninjured. Fifty patients had 75 psychiatric diagnoses. Nearly 10% of victims came to the hospital for symptoms triggered by, but not directly related to, the shooting, or for exacerbations of underlying conditions. There were 362 gunshot wounds recorded in the Barell Matrix (1.44 per patient). The Emergency Severity Index (ESI) distribution was skewed toward higher acuity than typical for an emergency department (ED), with 15.1% ESI 1 and 17.6% ESI 2 patients. Semi-automatic firearms were used in 100% of these civilian public mass shootings, with 50 total weapons for 13 shootings (Route 91 Harvest Festival, Las Vegas. 24). Assailant motivations were reported to be associated with hate crimes in 23.1%. CONCLUSION: Survivors of mass shootings have substantial morbidity and characteristic injury distribution, but 37% of victims had no GSW. Law enforcement, emergency medical systems, and hospital and ED disaster planners can use this information for injury mitigation and public policy planning. The BIDM is useful to organize data regarding gun violence injuries. We call for additional research funding to prevent and mitigate interpersonal firearm injuries, and for the National Violent Death Reporting System to expand tracking of injuries, their sequelae, complications, and societal costs. Department of Emergency Medicine, University of California, Irvine School of Medicine 2023-05 2023-05-02 /pmc/articles/PMC10284525/ /pubmed/37278791 http://dx.doi.org/10.5811/westjem.58395 Text en © 2023 Czaja et al. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed in accordance with the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY 4.0) License. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/)
spellingShingle Original Research
Czaja, Matthew P.
Kraus, Chadd K.
Phyo, Su
Olivieri, Patrick
Mederos, Dalier R.
Puente, Ivan
Mohammed, Salman
Berkeley, Ross P.
Slattery, David
Gildea, Thomas H.
Hardman, Claire
Palmer, Brandi
Whitmill, Melissa L.
Aluyen, Una
Pinnow, Jeffery M
Young, Amanda
Eastin, Carly D.
Kester, Nurani M.
Works, Kaitlyn R.
Pfeffer, Andrew N.
Keller, Aleksander W.
Tobias, Adam
Li, Benjamin
Yorkgitis, Brian
Saadat, Soheil
Langdorf, Mark I.
Nonfatal Injuries Sustained in Mass Shootings in the US, 2012–2019: Injury Diagnosis Matrix, Incident Context, and Public Health Considerations
title Nonfatal Injuries Sustained in Mass Shootings in the US, 2012–2019: Injury Diagnosis Matrix, Incident Context, and Public Health Considerations
title_full Nonfatal Injuries Sustained in Mass Shootings in the US, 2012–2019: Injury Diagnosis Matrix, Incident Context, and Public Health Considerations
title_fullStr Nonfatal Injuries Sustained in Mass Shootings in the US, 2012–2019: Injury Diagnosis Matrix, Incident Context, and Public Health Considerations
title_full_unstemmed Nonfatal Injuries Sustained in Mass Shootings in the US, 2012–2019: Injury Diagnosis Matrix, Incident Context, and Public Health Considerations
title_short Nonfatal Injuries Sustained in Mass Shootings in the US, 2012–2019: Injury Diagnosis Matrix, Incident Context, and Public Health Considerations
title_sort nonfatal injuries sustained in mass shootings in the us, 2012–2019: injury diagnosis matrix, incident context, and public health considerations
topic Original Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10284525/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37278791
http://dx.doi.org/10.5811/westjem.58395
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