• Eur J Emerg Med · Sep 1997

    Comparative Study

    Accidental firearm injury in childhood--a predictor of social and medical outcome?

    • S Ponzer, B Bergman, B Brismar, and S E Johansson.
    • Department of Orthopaedics, Karolinska Institute, Stockholm Söder Hospital, Sweden.
    • Eur J Emerg Med. 1997 Sep 1; 4 (3): 125-9.

    AbstractThis paper reports register data on a consecutive series of 141 children and teenagers hospitalized due to firearm injuries during a 21-year period in a community with restrictive firearm laws. Most of the injuries were minor and hospitalization was short. Shot by an air gun resulting in an eye injury was the most frequent reason for hospitalization. The patients hospitalized due to firearm injuries were compared with a control group composed of 141 individuals matched pair-wise for sex and age. The total morbidity during the follow-up period of on average 10 years was higher among patients compared with controls concerning both somatic diseases and injuries. All cases of severe psychopathology were found in the patient group. Criminality was higher among patients compared with controls and the former were younger at the time of the first crime compared with the latter. This study indicates that, irrespective of firearm laws, young people suffering from firearm injuries, even if the injury is classified as accidental, run a higher risk of becoming psychosocially disadvantaged and criminal as adults. This makes preventative measures highly necessary not only from a societal point of view, but also to avoid individual suffering in this high-risk group of youngsters.

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