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Hospital costs for children with firearm-related injuries rose from 2006 to 2014, while the incidence of emergency department visits declined over the same period, according to the first national study of such visits in children.
Median charges were $2,445 for an ED visit and $44,966 for inpatient management of individuals under 18 years of age for the entire study period, with both increasing over time and all data adjusted to 2018 dollars. The median charge for an ED visit rose from over $2,100 in 2006 to under $2,900 in 2014, while the inpatient median increased from approximately $43,000 to about $59,000. Total charges for firearm-related injuries in children were $2.5 billion during 2006-2014, with a mean of $270 million a year, Faiz Gani, MBBS, and Joseph K. Canner, MHS, said in JAMA Pediatrics.
The overall incidence of ED visits was 11.3/100,000 children under 18 years of age for the study period, with a steady decline seen from 2006, when incidence was about 15 visits/100,000, to 10/100,000 in 2014. The rate had dropped to about 7.5 visits/100,000 in 2013 before increasing in 2014, Dr. Gani and Mr. Canner of Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, said based on data for 75,086 visits from the Nationwide Emergency Medicine Sample.
A trend observed throughout the course of the study was the higher incidence of ED visits among males, which was consistently more than five times higher than that of females. The highest incidence by age group was 85.9/100,000 for males aged 15-17 years. The most common intent of injury was assault at 49%, with unintentional injury next at 39% and suicide at 2%, the investigators reported.
This “first and largest nationally representative study” demonstrates the “substantial clinical and financial burden associated with firearm-related injuries among pediatric patients. Moving forward, additional resources and funds should be allocated to the study of firearm-related injuries. Only through further understanding of the social, political, and health-related risk factors for these injuries can we develop and implement effective policies to address this public health concern, wrote Dr. Gani and Mr. Canner, who reported no conflicts of interest.
SOURCE: JAMA Pediatr. 2018 Oct 29. doi: 10.1001/jamapediatrics.2018.3091.
Hospital costs for children with firearm-related injuries rose from 2006 to 2014, while the incidence of emergency department visits declined over the same period, according to the first national study of such visits in children.
Median charges were $2,445 for an ED visit and $44,966 for inpatient management of individuals under 18 years of age for the entire study period, with both increasing over time and all data adjusted to 2018 dollars. The median charge for an ED visit rose from over $2,100 in 2006 to under $2,900 in 2014, while the inpatient median increased from approximately $43,000 to about $59,000. Total charges for firearm-related injuries in children were $2.5 billion during 2006-2014, with a mean of $270 million a year, Faiz Gani, MBBS, and Joseph K. Canner, MHS, said in JAMA Pediatrics.
The overall incidence of ED visits was 11.3/100,000 children under 18 years of age for the study period, with a steady decline seen from 2006, when incidence was about 15 visits/100,000, to 10/100,000 in 2014. The rate had dropped to about 7.5 visits/100,000 in 2013 before increasing in 2014, Dr. Gani and Mr. Canner of Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, said based on data for 75,086 visits from the Nationwide Emergency Medicine Sample.
A trend observed throughout the course of the study was the higher incidence of ED visits among males, which was consistently more than five times higher than that of females. The highest incidence by age group was 85.9/100,000 for males aged 15-17 years. The most common intent of injury was assault at 49%, with unintentional injury next at 39% and suicide at 2%, the investigators reported.
This “first and largest nationally representative study” demonstrates the “substantial clinical and financial burden associated with firearm-related injuries among pediatric patients. Moving forward, additional resources and funds should be allocated to the study of firearm-related injuries. Only through further understanding of the social, political, and health-related risk factors for these injuries can we develop and implement effective policies to address this public health concern, wrote Dr. Gani and Mr. Canner, who reported no conflicts of interest.
SOURCE: JAMA Pediatr. 2018 Oct 29. doi: 10.1001/jamapediatrics.2018.3091.
Hospital costs for children with firearm-related injuries rose from 2006 to 2014, while the incidence of emergency department visits declined over the same period, according to the first national study of such visits in children.
Median charges were $2,445 for an ED visit and $44,966 for inpatient management of individuals under 18 years of age for the entire study period, with both increasing over time and all data adjusted to 2018 dollars. The median charge for an ED visit rose from over $2,100 in 2006 to under $2,900 in 2014, while the inpatient median increased from approximately $43,000 to about $59,000. Total charges for firearm-related injuries in children were $2.5 billion during 2006-2014, with a mean of $270 million a year, Faiz Gani, MBBS, and Joseph K. Canner, MHS, said in JAMA Pediatrics.
The overall incidence of ED visits was 11.3/100,000 children under 18 years of age for the study period, with a steady decline seen from 2006, when incidence was about 15 visits/100,000, to 10/100,000 in 2014. The rate had dropped to about 7.5 visits/100,000 in 2013 before increasing in 2014, Dr. Gani and Mr. Canner of Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, said based on data for 75,086 visits from the Nationwide Emergency Medicine Sample.
A trend observed throughout the course of the study was the higher incidence of ED visits among males, which was consistently more than five times higher than that of females. The highest incidence by age group was 85.9/100,000 for males aged 15-17 years. The most common intent of injury was assault at 49%, with unintentional injury next at 39% and suicide at 2%, the investigators reported.
This “first and largest nationally representative study” demonstrates the “substantial clinical and financial burden associated with firearm-related injuries among pediatric patients. Moving forward, additional resources and funds should be allocated to the study of firearm-related injuries. Only through further understanding of the social, political, and health-related risk factors for these injuries can we develop and implement effective policies to address this public health concern, wrote Dr. Gani and Mr. Canner, who reported no conflicts of interest.
SOURCE: JAMA Pediatr. 2018 Oct 29. doi: 10.1001/jamapediatrics.2018.3091.
FROM JAMA PEDIATRICS