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Journal Article

Citation

Rowhani-Rahbar A, Fan MD, Simonetti JA, Lyons VH, Wang J, Zatzick D, Rivara FP. Ann. Intern Med. 2016; 165(12): 841-847.

Affiliation

From the University of Washington, Seattle, Washington.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2016, American College of Physicians)

DOI

10.7326/M16-1596

PMID

27750282

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Hospital-based violence intervention programs typically focus on patients whose firearm injury occurred through interpersonal violence (assault). Knowledge of violence perpetration by victims of unintentional (accidental) firearm injury is limited.

OBJECTIVE: To examine violence perpetration before and after a patient becomes hospitalized for firearm injury according to injury intent (intentional [assault] or unintentional [accidental]).

DESIGN: A case-control study and a retrospective cohort study. SETTING: Hospitals in Washington. PATIENTS: Persons aged 15 years or older hospitalized for a firearm injury, other injuries, or a noninjury reason from 2006 to 2007. MEASUREMENTS: In the case-control study, the odds of violence-related arrest from 2001 through hospitalization by injury intent among 3 groups were compared. In the cohort study, the rates of violence-related arrest from hospitalization through 2011 by injury intent among 3 groups were compared.

RESULTS: Patients with unintentional firearm injuries (n RESULTS:  = 180) were more likely than those with other unintentional injuries (n = 62 795; odds ratio [OR], 2.01 [95% CI, 1.31 to 3.09]) and no injuries (n = 172 830; OR, 3.43 [CI, 2.22 to 5.32]) to have been arrested for a violent crime before hospitalization. Prior violence-related arrest did not dif RESULTS: fer between patients with assault-related firearm injuries (n = 339) and those with other assault-related injuries (n = 2342; OR, 1.10 [CI, 0.84 to 1.46]). During follow-up, the cumulative incidence of violence-related arrest for patients with unintentional and assault-related firearm injuries was RESULTS: 10% and 15% (subhazard ratio, 1.88 [CI, 1.11 to 3.17] and 1.61 [CI, 1.08 to 2.44]), respectively, compared with 1% for those without injuries. LIMITATION: Exclusion of self-inflicted injuries, misclassification of intent, and ascertainment bias.

CONCLUSION: Some firearm injuries classified as accidental may indicate involvement in the cycle of violence and present an opportunity for intervention. PRIMARY FUNDING SOURCE: City of Seattle and the University of Washington Royalty Research Fund.


Language: en

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