In St. Louis, the prevalence of gun violence is driving researchers to better understand the causes behind these incidents. But a new study that evaluated three years of medical data from St. Louis Children's Hospital found that the majority of children injured by guns weren鈥檛 victims of negligent adults or picking up firearms themselves.
Instead, the analysis, which analyzed 156 cases of children injured by guns between 2014 and 2017, found that just 13% were caused by intentional assaults. Nearly two-thirds of victims were 鈥渟hot outdoors by an unknown shooter, the motivation of which was unknown.鈥
Dr. Mary Beth Bernardin, the lead researcher of the study, said the results show just how little data is available on the circumstances of most shootings 鈥 and answers are hard to come by when victims often don鈥檛 know why they were shot or by whom.
Bernardin, an assistant professor of clinical emergency medicine and pediatric emergency medicine at the University of Missouri School of Medicine, said the study鈥檚 findings weren鈥檛 surprising. When it comes to the causes of shootings, 鈥淚t鈥檚 astounding how little we know.鈥
The cases in the study involved children 6 to 17, described as 鈥減rimarily Black adolescent males.鈥 The motivation for the shootings was unknown in 93% of cases, while 36% of these shootings were classified as a 鈥渄rive-by.鈥
Dr. Lindsay Clukies, a Washington University emergency medicine physician at St. Louis Children鈥檚 Hospital, said the study鈥檚 findings echo what she鈥檚 seen treating gunshot victims in an emergency department.
鈥淲hen these children come to our ER, they may be carried in the front door. And we don't ask a lot of questions at that time, we just start resuscitating them to save their lives,鈥 she said. 鈥淭hat's our primary goal in the emergency room. So, oftentimes, we don't know the circumstances right away.鈥
Clukies also leads BJC Healthcare鈥檚 gun safety intervention program, which recently expanded . She told St. Louis on the Air that she hopes the new research helps humanize the victims of gun violence, especially kids, who often don鈥檛 have an explanation for why they were shot.
鈥淭hey were sitting at home doing their schoolwork, or they were walking to the bus stop. And (the victims) themselves may not know what happened,鈥 she said.
The study, she added, will 鈥渉elp us better serve these kids and better focus on prevention, in order to stop these injuries from happening in the first place.鈥
The study, 鈥鈥 was published May 3 in the Journal of Surgical Research.
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