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Do criminals go to the hospital when they are shot?
  1. J P May1,
  2. D Hemenway2,
  3. A Hall3
  1. 1South Florida Reception Center, Miami, Florida
  2. 2Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts
  3. 3Community Education Department, Riley Hospital for Children, Indianapolis, Indiana
  1. Correspondence to:
 Dr John P May, Medical Director, South Florida Reception Center, 14000 NW 41st Street, Miami, FL 33178, USA;
 Drjpmay{at}aol.com

Abstract

Objectives: To determine whether criminals go to the hospital when they are shot. Such information is needed to check on the accuracy of using hospital emergency room data to estimate non-fatal gunshot wounds.

Setting: Five jails across the US.

Methods: A survey of inmates being booked into jail, administered by in-house health care staff.

Results: Over 90% of over 300 criminals who had been wounded sometime before their incarceration reported going to a hospital for treatment after being shot. These results are consistent with previous findings from one jail.

Conclusions: Jail inmates who had previously been shot were likely to have been treated in a hospital. This limited finding is consistent with the proposition that hospital/emergency department data may miss only a small percentage of gunshot wounds to criminals.

  • gunshot
  • wounding
  • jail
  • surveillance
  • criminals
  • firearms
  • NEISS, National Electronic Injury Surveillance System
  • NFISS, National Firearm Injury Statistical System
  • gunshot
  • wounding
  • jail
  • surveillance
  • criminals
  • firearms
  • NEISS, National Electronic Injury Surveillance System
  • NFISS, National Firearm Injury Statistical System

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