Inaccuracies Exist in Trauma Registry Data Regarding Shooting Intent for Pediatric Firearm Injuries
Topic overview
This study examines data accuracy in pediatric trauma registries, specifically focusing on how shooting intent is classified for firearm injuries in children. The research identifies systematic inaccuracies in institutional trauma registry data that feeds into the National Trauma Data Bank, raising concerns about the reliability of this foundational resource for pediatric trauma research and injury prevention efforts.
Key takeaways
- Institutional trauma registries feeding the National Trauma Data Bank may contain significant data accuracy deficits.
- Shooting intent classification for pediatric firearm injuries is prone to inaccuracy in trauma registry documentation.
- Data quality issues in trauma registries can compromise the validity of pediatric firearm injury research.
- Clinicians should verify shooting intent data independently rather than relying solely on registry classifications.
Keywords
Hashtags
Full article text
Full article text not available for this entry
How to cite: GlobalCastMD. Inaccuracies Exist in Trauma Registry Data Regarding Shooting Intent for Pediatric Firearm Injuries. GlobalCastMD Medical Library. 2024-09-06. https://dev.library.globalcastmd.com/article/9134?via_space=staycurrentmd
Comments