| Literature DB >> 35781347 |
Lauren A Magee1, Bradley Ray2, Philip Huynh3, Daniel O'Donnell4, Megan L Ranney5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Drug overdose and firearm injury are two of the United States (US) most unrelenting public health crises, both of which have been compounded by the COVID-19 pandemic. Programs and policies typically focus on each epidemic, alone, which may produce less efficient interventions if overlap does exist. The objective is to examine whether drug overdose correlates with and is associated with firearm injury at the census tract level while controlling for neighborhood characteristics.Entities:
Keywords: Drug overdose; Firearm injuries; Neighborhoods; Public health
Year: 2022 PMID: 35781347 PMCID: PMC9252058 DOI: 10.1186/s40621-022-00383-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Inj Epidemiol ISSN: 2197-1714
Fig. 1Toxicology results among overdose deaths as a reflection of the changing drug market. Notes: Bars represent the total number of accidental drug overdose deaths each year and lines represent the proportion of deaths where that substance was detected in toxicology results. Detection of substances is not mutually exclusive as most overdose deaths contain multiple substances
Fig. 2Drug overdose and firearm injury rates, Indianapolis, Indiana, 2018–2020
Fig. 3Bivariate spatial clusters of drug overdoses and firearm injury
Characteristics of spatial clusters of drug overdose and firearm injury rates
| City wide | High firearm injury–high overdose | High firearm injury–low overdose | High overdose–low firearm injury | Low firearm injury–low overdose | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean (SD) | Mean (SD) | Mean (SD) | Mean (SD) | Mean (SD) | |
| Firearm homicide | 69.2 (118.6) | 2453.6 (221.5) | 118.0 (93.9) | 19.6 (27.7) | 10.9 (22.7) |
| Nonfatal firearm injury | 245.6 (319.4) | 786.9 (402.7) | 320.6 (161.1) | 74.5 (5.50) | 33.9 (46.1) |
| Composite firearm injury | 314.8 (418.6) | 1030.3 (564.9) | 438.7 (201.7) | 94.1 (33.2) | 44.7 (63.3) |
| Fatal drug-related overdose | 100.2 (98.4) | 252.7 (141.4) | 83.9 (55.5) | 172.4 (144.0) | 44.6 (40.0) |
| Nonfatal drug-related overdose | 7178.9 (8105.6) | 6029.3 (3128.5) | 1744.1 (363.8) | 4648.4 (3179.3) | 800.2 (522.7) |
| Composite drug-related overdose | 7279.1 (8171.3) | 18,340.5 (9421.7) | 5316.1 (1114.7) | 14,117.7 (9682.1) | 2445.2 (1589.5) |
| % Poverty | 23.6 (4.90) | ||||
| % Single female-headed house | 2.32 (1.51) | ||||
| % Unemployed | 3.07 (0.91) | ||||
| % Public assistance | 4.73 (2.84) | ||||
| % Black | 2.84 (2.47) | ||||
| % Hispanic | 3.22 (0.40) | ||||
| % Male population 15–24 | 10.3 (4.09) | ||||
| % Renters | 25.5 (1.20) | ||||
| % Abandoned homes | 0.51 (0.45) | ||||
Spatial clusters based on Moran’s I scatter plot of statistically significant census tracts
Bolded values indicate p < 0.05 of paired t-tests of neighborhood characteristic and composite overdose and firearm injury rate
*Bolded values indicate p < 0.05 of paired t-tests of neighborhood characteristic composite overdose rate only
Drug Overdoses associated with Firearm Injury, by year and neighborhood characteristics
| Model 1 | Model 2 | |
|---|---|---|
| Composite firearm injury, 2019 | Composite firearm injury, 2020 | |
| IRR (95% CI) | IRR (95% CI) | |
| Drug overdoses, 2018 | – | |
| Drug overdoses, 2019 | – | |
| Structural Disadvantage | 1.192 (0.961, 1.479) | |
| % Black | ||
| % Hispanic | ||
| % Male Population 15–24 | 1.009 (0.991, 1.027) | 0.999 (0.983, 1.016) |
| % Renters | 1.001 (0.992, 1.010) | 1.004 (0.995, 1.014) |
| % Abandoned Homes | 1.018 (0.994, 1.043) | 0.998 (0.972, 1.024) |
| EMS Activity | 1.062 (0.722, 1.562) | 0.965 (0.711, 1.310) |
| Spatial Lag | 1.033 (0.985, 1.082) | |
| AIC | 796.31 | 924.75 |
| BIC | 839.95 | 968.38 |
Bolded values indicate p < 0.05, IRR: incident rate ratio, CI: confidence interval