Firearm Violence Among Youth: Public Health Strategies for Prevention☆☆☆★
Received 22 March 1996; accepted 1 April 1996.
Abstract
Firearm violence is a serious threat to the health of our children: an American child dies of gunshot wounds every 11/
2 hours, and every 2 days 30 children—the equivalent of a school classroom—lose their lives to guns.1 Injured children and adolescents are cared for in emergency departments and trauma centers, and in some urban areas the increasing incidence of firearm injuries threatens to overwhelm the trauma care delivery system. Because of the prevalence and enormous cost of firearm violence it has been identified as an epidemic and a public health emergency. In this article we discuss the burden of firearm injury and its effect on children and young adults, and we outline a public health approach to firearm injury prevention. [Powell EC, Sheehan KM, Christoffel KK: Firearm violence among youth: Public health strategies for prevention. Ann Emerg Med August 1996;28:204-212.]
☆ From the Divisions of Pediatric Emergency Medicine* and General Academic Pediatrics‡ and the Violent Injury Prevention Center, Children's Memorial Medical Center§, Northwestern University School of Medicine, Chicago, Illinois.
☆☆Address for reprints: Elizabeth C Powell, MD, 2300 Children's Plaza #62, Chicago, Illinois 60614, 312-880-8245, Fax 312-880-8267