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Journal Article

Citation

Ponzer S, Sundquist J, Johansson SE, Bergman B. Ethn. Health 1998; 3(4): 275-282.

Affiliation

Karolinska Institutet, Department of Orthopaedics, Stockholm Söder Hospital, Sweden.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1998, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/13557858.1998.9961870

PMID

10403109

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To study gender and ethnic aspects in a population consisting of patients treated for non-fatal firearm injuries at public hospitals in Stockholm, Sweden, during a period of 21 years. DESIGN: Retrospective study. Ethnicity was defined as being a foreign-born individual or a native Swede. The morbidity and criminality data were analysed with unconditional logistic regression and the mortality data were analysed by a proportional hazard model. RESULTS: Females and foreign-born persons were more often victims of attempted murder than males or native Swedes. Attempted suicide was more common among native Swedes. Male patients, single persons and Finnish immigrants treated for a firearm injury all showed an increased risk of being registered for criminality or committing a violent crime. There was no difference between native Swedes and foreign-born persons concerning the number of hospitalisations during the follow-up period. Living alone and being of male gender were associated with an increased risk of hospitalisation. Firearm victims, independently of ethnicity, had an increased mortality rate compared to a Swedish population; the standardised mortality ratio (SMR) for males was almost 3 and for females almost 8 compared to the SMR of 1 for the whole Swedish population. CONCLUSION: Firearm victims constitute a population at risk from social, psychological as well as from medical points of view. The present study shows an association between gender, ethnicity, criminality, and morbidity among firearm victims underlining the importance of ethnic- and gender-specific violence prevention strategies.


Language: en

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