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Journal Article

Citation

Affinati S, Patton D, Hansen L, Ranney M, Christmas AB, Violano P, Sodhi A, Robinson B, Crandall M. Trauma Surg. Acute Care Open 2016; 1(1): e000024.

Affiliation

Department of Surgery, University of Florida College of Medicine, Jacksonville, Florida, USA.

Comment In:

Trauma Surg Acute Care Open 2016;1(1):e000050.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2016, The author(s) and the American Association for the Surgery of Trauma, Publisher BMJ Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1136/tsaco-2016-000024

PMID

29766064

PMCID

PMC5891700

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Violent injury and reinjury take a devastating toll on distressed communities. Many trauma centers have created hospital-based violent injury prevention programs (HVIP) to address psychosocial, educational, and mental health needs of injured patients that may contribute to reinjury.

OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the overall effectiveness of HVIPs for violent injury prevention. We performed an evidence-based review to answer the following population, intervention, comparator, outcomes (PICO) question: Are HVIPs attending to adult patients (age 18+) treated for intentional injury more effective than the usual care at preventing: intentional violent reinjury and/or death; arrest and/or incarceration; substance abuse and/or mental issues; job and/or school attainment? DATA SOURCES: PubMed, Web of Science, Google Scholar, and the Cochrane Library were queried for salient articles by a professional librarian on two separate occasions, and related articles were identified from references. STUDY ELIGIBILITY CRITERIA PARTICIPANTS INTERVENTIONS: Eligible studies examined adult patients treated for intentional injury in a hospital-based violence prevention program compared to a control group. STUDY APPRAISAL AND SYNTHESIS METHODS: We used the Grading of Recommendations Assessment, Development, and Evaluation methodology to assess the breadth and quality of the evidence.

RESULTS: 71 articles were identified. After discarding duplicates, reviews, and those articles that did not address our PICO questions, we ultimately reviewed 10 articles. We found insufficient evidence to recommend adult-focused HVIP interventions. LIMITATIONS: There was a relative paucity of data, and available studies were limited by self-selection bias and small sample sizes.

CONCLUSIONS: We make no recommendation with respect to adult-focused HVIP interventions.


Language: en

Keywords

injury prevention; violence

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