Impact of the COVID-19 Pandemic on Pediatric Firearm-Related Injuries in the USA

H. Liou, Max Kapustin, Monica Bhatt M.P.P., C. Boyd, Christine Cahaney, Jasmine Thomas
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Abstract

Introduction: Firearms are the second leading cause of death for those under age 19 in the United States Themajority of unintentional gun-related deaths occur in the home while parents/guardians are absent, and over1 in 3 children in America live in a household with a gun Previous research has demonstrated that rearm-related injuries and fatalities are more prevalent for children who live in homes with guns, as well as in stateswith higher rates of gun ownership The COVID-19 pandemic has caused unprecedented change in Americansociety, including closures of over 124,000 schools, affecting over 55 million students across all 50 states Wesought to analyze the impact of pandemic-related public health measures implemented since March 2020 -including school shutdowns and “Stay at Home” orders - on pediatric rearm-related injuries and fatalities We also investigated if ndings were modulated by state-level differences in legislation around Safe Storage(SS) of rearms Methods: Firearm-related injury and fatality data for victims aged 0-17 years from January 1,2019 to April 26, 2020 was obtained from the Gun Violence Archive Information about state adoption of SS laws was obtained from the Giffords Law Center Difference-in-differences estimates were calculated in Statausing ordinary least squares with heteroskedasticity robust standard errors Results: Preliminary resultsdemonstrate several changes in pediatric rearm-related injuries and fatalities in the United States sinceMarch 2020 Daily pediatric rearm-related injuries and fatalities appear largely unchanged on weekdays(Monday through Friday) in 2020 relative to 2019 However, daily pediatric rearm-related injuries andfatalities appear to have decreased by 9 27 (p = 0 005) on weekends (Saturday and Sunday) in 2020 comparedto 2019 This decrease in weekend pediatric rearm-related injuries and fatalities appears to be larger instates without Safe Storage laws Conclusions: These preliminary results suggest that public health measuresadopted in response to COVID-19 are associated with a decrease in pediatric rearm-related injuries andfatalities on weekends This pattern may be consistent with the likely increased presence of parents/guardiansin the home on weekends when compared with the pre-pandemic era, potentially limiting minors' access torearms Firearm-related violence may be stable during the pandemic on weekdays because youth are undersimilar levels of supervision whether in school prior to the pandemic or at home with a parent/guardianduring the pandemic Further investigation is needed to expand upon these results, delineate potential sub-group differences between various types of rearm-related injuries and fatalities (unintentional injuries,homicides, mass/school shootings, or suicides), and follow these trends while pandemic-related policiesremain in place Our ndings may help inform physician counseling strategies for injury prevention andsuggest future directions for advocacy and research
COVID-19大流行对美国儿科枪支相关伤害的影响
作品简介:枪支是美国19岁以下儿童死亡的第二大原因,大多数与枪支有关的意外死亡发生在父母/监护人不在的家中,超过三分之一的美国儿童生活在有枪的家庭中。此前的研究表明,与枪支有关的伤害和死亡在生活在有枪的家庭中的儿童中更为普遍。COVID-19大流行给美国社会带来了前所未有的变化,包括关闭了12.4万多所学校,我们应该分析自2020年3月以来实施的与大流行相关的公共卫生措施(包括学校停课和“呆在家里”命令)对儿科武器相关伤害和死亡的影响。我们还调查了调查结果是否受到各州在武器安全储存(SS)方面立法差异的影响。2019年1月1日至2020年4月26日0-17岁受害者的枪支相关伤害和死亡数据来自枪支暴力档案,各州采用SS法的信息来自吉福兹法律中心,采用异方差稳健标准误差的普通最小二乘法计算差异估计。初步结果显示,自2020年3月以来,美国儿科武器相关伤害和死亡人数发生了一些变化,与2019年相比,2020年工作日(周一至周五)每天的儿科武器相关伤害和死亡人数基本没有变化。与2019年相比,2020年周末(周六和周日)每日儿科武器相关伤害和死亡人数似乎减少了9.27人(p = 0.005)。没有安全储存法的州周末儿科武器相关伤害和死亡人数的减少幅度似乎更大。这些初步结果表明,为应对COVID-19而采取的公共卫生措施与周末儿科武器相关伤害和死亡的减少有关,这种模式可能与周末父母/监护人在家的人数可能比大流行前增加相一致。在大流行期间,与枪支有关的暴力可能在工作日保持稳定,因为无论是在大流行之前的学校,还是在大流行期间与父母/监护人在一起的家中,青少年都处于类似的监督水平,需要进一步调查以扩大这些结果,划定各种类型的与枪支有关的伤害和死亡(意外伤害、杀人、大规模/学校枪击事件)之间的潜在亚组差异。或自杀),并在与流行病相关的政策仍然存在的情况下遵循这些趋势。我们的研究结果可能有助于告知医生预防伤害的咨询策略,并为宣传和研究提出未来的方向
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