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Journal Article

Citation

Allard D, Burch VC. S. Afr. Med. J. 2005; 95(8): 591-594.

Affiliation

Department of Surgery, G F Jooste Hospital, Cape Town. denisallard@mweb.co.za

Copyright

(Copyright © 2005, South African Medical Association)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

16201002

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Firearms, the leading external cause of non-natural deaths in South Africa, claim approximately 15,000 lives annually. Up to 127,000 firearm-injured victims seek state health care assistance per annum. The fiscal burden of treating these injuries is not known. METHODS: All serious abdominal firearm-related injuries (requiring admission to hospital and emergency surgery) presenting to a state hospital over a 6-month period were reviewed. A cost analysis using five variables was performed: operating theatre time, duration of hospital and high-care unit stay, pharmaceutical and blood products used, laboratory services used and diagnostic imaging studies performed. RESULTS: Twenty-three patients with serious abdominal gunshot injuries were admitted, of whom 21 (91%) were treated at the hospital from admission until discharge. Each admission cost approximately US dollars 1,467. Hospital stay (47%) and operating theatre (30%) costs accounted for most of the total cost. Pharmaceuticals and blood products (20%), laboratory services (2%) and imaging studies (1%) contributed less than 25% to the total cost. CONCLUSION: Serious abdominal gunshot injuries cost at least 13-fold more than the annual per capita South African government expenditure on health. This fiscal burden of approximately US dollars 2.9 million, almost 4% of the annual health budget, does not include the cost of treating other serious gunshot injuries. These findings highlight the need for successful violence prevention strategies in South African.

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