Title of article :
Fatal firearm-related injury surveillance in Maryland
Author/Authors :
Brian Wiersema، نويسنده , , Colin Loftin، نويسنده , , Robert C. Mullen، نويسنده , , Erich M. Daub، نويسنده , , Monique A. Sheppard، نويسنده , , John E. Smialek، نويسنده , , David McDowall، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 1998
Abstract :
Context: Maryland began a statewide firearm-related injury surveillance system in 1995. The system now focuses on firearm-related deaths; a system to monitor nonfatal injuries is being developed. The system is passive; it accesses, integrates, and analyzes data collected by Maryland’s Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, Maryland State Police, and Division of Health Statistics.
Objective: To evaluate the surveillance system’s ability to ascertain cases in the absence of a standard for the true number of cases.
Design: Link records of the same firearm-related death captured by the surveillance system’s multiple data sources, comparing the rate of false positives and false negatives, and assessing errors in linkage variables.
Setting: Maryland, 1991–1994.
Participants: All deaths occurring in the state of Maryland as a result of a firearm-related injury.
Main Outcome Measures: Sensitivity and positive predictive value.
Results: The system is extremely sensitive, detecting 99.61% of cases, and it has a very high positive predictive value, with 99.87% of the cases identified from medical examiner’s office data being confirmed as actual cases.
Conclusions: Maryland’s database of information from the medical examiner’s office is highly accurate for ascertaining firearm-related deaths that occur in the state. A unique identifier common across data sources would ease record linkage efforts, and improve the system’s ability to monitor firearm-related deaths.
Keywords :
Firearms , data collection , population surveillance , Evaluation studies , mortality , Medical Record Linkage
Journal title :
American Journal of Preventive Medicine
Journal title :
American Journal of Preventive Medicine