Parental Firearm Injuries Linked To Increased Rates Of Psychiatric Disorder Diagnoses, Mental Health Visits In Children, Study Finds

MedPage Today (1/28, Jeffrey) reports a study utilizing US commercial health insurance claims data found that “firearm injuries among parents were associated with increased rates of psychiatric disorder diagnoses and mental health visits in their children.” Researchers observed that “parental firearm injury was associated with 8.4 additional psychiatric diagnoses per 1,000 youths, as well as 23.1 additional mental health visits per 1,000 youths compared with controls averaged over the 12 months following the injury.” They noted the “increase was largest for trauma-related diagnoses such as post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), with an additional 8.5 diagnoses per 1,000 youths versus controls averaged over the year.” The study was published in The New England Journal of Medicine.Related Links:

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