Association of pediatric firearm injury with neighborhood social deprivation in Philadelphia.

IF 2.1 Q3 CRITICAL CARE MEDICINE Trauma Surgery & Acute Care Open Pub Date : 2024-08-14 eCollection Date: 2024-01-01 DOI:10.1136/tsaco-2024-001458
Jeremy Kauffman, Michael Nance, Jeremy W Cannon, Joseph Victor Sakran, Elliott R Haut, Dane R Scantling, Grace Rozycki, James P Byrne
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Abstract

Background: Firearm-related injury is the leading cause of death among children and adolescents. There is a need to clarify the association of neighborhood environment with gun violence affecting children. We evaluated the relative contribution of specific social determinants to observed rates of firearm-related injury in children of different ages.

Methods: This was a population-based study of firearm injury in children (age <18 years) that occurred in Philadelphia census tracts (2015-2021). The exposure was neighborhood Social Deprivation Index (SDI) quintile. The outcome was the rate of pediatric firearm injury due to interpersonal violence stratified by age, sex, race, and year. Hierarchical negative binomial regression measured the risk-adjusted association between SDI quintile and pediatric firearm injury rate. The relative contribution of specific components of the SDI to neighborhood risk of pediatric firearm injury was estimated. Effect modification and the role of specific social determinants were evaluated in younger (<15 years old) versus older children.

Results: 927 children were injured due to gun violence during the study period. Firearm-injured children were predominantly male (87%), of black race (89%), with a median age of 16 (IQR 15-17). Nearly one-half of all pediatric shootings (47%) occurred in the quintile of highest SDI (Q5). Younger children represented a larger proportion of children shot in neighborhoods within the highest (Q5), compared with the lowest (Q1), SDI quintile (25% vs 5%; p<0.007). After risk adjustment, pediatric firearm-related injury was strongly associated with increasing SDI (Q5 vs Q1; aRR 14; 95% CI 6 to 32). Specific measures of social deprivation (poverty, incomplete schooling, single-parent homes, and rented housing) were associated with significantly greater increases in firearm injury risk for younger, compared with older, children. Component measures of the SDI explained 58% of observed differences between neighborhoods.

Conclusions: Neighborhood measures of social deprivation are strongly associated with firearm-related injury in children. Younger children appear to be disproportionately affected by specific adverse social determinants compared with older children. Root cause evaluation is required to clarify the interaction with other factors such as the availability of firearms and interpersonal conflict that place children at risk in neighborhoods where gun violence is common.

Level of evidence: Level III - Observational Study.

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费城小儿枪伤与邻里社会贫困程度的关系。
背景:与枪支有关的伤害是儿童和青少年死亡的主要原因。有必要澄清邻里环境与影响儿童的枪支暴力之间的关系。我们评估了特定社会决定因素对观察到的不同年龄儿童枪支相关伤害率的相对贡献:这是一项基于人群的儿童枪支伤害研究(年龄 结果:927 名儿童因枪支而受伤:在研究期间,927 名儿童因枪支暴力而受伤。枪伤儿童主要为男性(87%)、黑人(89%),中位年龄为 16 岁(IQR 15-17)。近二分之一的儿童枪击案(47%)发生在 SDI 值最高的五分位数(Q5)。与社会发展指数最低的五分位数(Q1)相比,在社会发展指数最高的五分位数(Q5)社区发生的枪击案中,年龄较小的儿童所占比例更大(25% vs 5%;P结论:居民区的社会贫困程度与枪支造成的儿童伤害密切相关。与年龄较大的儿童相比,年龄较小的儿童受到特定不利社会决定因素的影响似乎更大。需要进行根本原因评估,以明确枪支供应和人际冲突等其他因素之间的相互作用,这些因素使枪支暴力频发的社区中的儿童面临风险:证据等级:III 级 - 观察性研究。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.70
自引率
5.00%
发文量
71
审稿时长
12 weeks
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