2025
Pediatric Nonfatal Firearm Injury Health Care Utilization.
Du J, Andrews A, Gastineau K, Lee L, Ranney M, Sacks C, Song Z, Fleegler E, Pulcini C. Pediatric Nonfatal Firearm Injury Health Care Utilization. 2025, 156 PMID: 40555422, DOI: 10.1542/peds.2024-070424.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAdolescentChildChild, PreschoolFirearmsHospitalizationHumansPatient Acceptance of Health CareUnited StatesWounds, GunshotConceptsFirearm injuriesHealth care outcomesHealth care useHealth care utilizationMental health diagnosesPediatric firearm injuriesHealth care spendingCare outcomesCare useInjury preventionCare utilizationPostinjury careInjured childrenHealth diagnosisCare spendingPrevention effortsHealth impactsIntervention effortsHealthLongitudinal researchChildrenPostinjuryCost-effectiveFirearmUnited States
2024
Factors Associated With Recurrent Pediatric Firearm Injury : A 10-Year Retrospective Cohort Analysis.
Miller Z, Cooper B, Lew D, Ancona R, Moran V, Behr C, Spruce M, Kranker L, Mancini M, Vogel M, Schuerer D, Clukies L, Ranney M, Foraker R, Mueller K. Factors Associated With Recurrent Pediatric Firearm Injury : A 10-Year Retrospective Cohort Analysis. Annals Of Internal Medicine 2024, 177: 1381-1388. PMID: 39284184, PMCID: PMC11537306, DOI: 10.7326/m24-0430.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchConceptsFirearm injuriesAged 0Level I trauma hospitalHealth insurance statusChildren Aged 0National Institutes of HealthStudy periodPatients aged 0Pediatric patients aged 0Reduce reinjuryNon-HispanicInstitutes of HealthCohort of childrenInsurance statusPatient's residenceRetrospective cohort analysisCensus tractsSocial Vulnerability IndexTime-to-event analysisAdult hospitalsReinjuryIncreased riskCohort analysisEstimated riskHospital
This site is protected by hCaptcha and its Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply