» Articles » PMID: 35177435

Linking Out-of-hospital Deaths with a Regional Hospital-based Firearm Injury Database: a Clinical Researcher's Guide to Accessing Data from the National Death Index

Overview
Journal Inj Prev
Date 2022 Feb 18
PMID 35177435
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Methods: We outline the key steps of our submission to the NDI. Data were collected from research team meeting notes, team member emails with NDI staff, and information provided from the NDI website and supplementary guides. Few of our collaborators or university partner investigators had accessed or used data from the NDI. We discuss the online NDI Processing Portal data request, data preparation and receipt from the NDI, troubleshooting tips, and a timeline of events.

Results: Our query to the NDI returned 12 034 records of 12 219 firearm-injured patient records from 2010 and 2019. The record match rate was 98.5%.

Discussion: Linking hospital-based data sets with NDI data can provide valuable information on out-of-hospital deaths. This has the potential to improve the quality of longitudinal morbidity and mortality calculations in hospital-based patient cohorts. We encountered logistic and administrative challenges in completing the online NDI Processing Portal and in preparing and receiving data from the NDI. It is our hope that the lessons learnt presented herein will help facilitate easy and streamlined acquisition of valuable NDI data for other clinical researchers.

What This Study Adds: - A step-by-step guide for clinical researchers of how to apply to access data from the National Death Index (NDI).- Advice and lessons learned on how to efficiently and effectively access data from the NDI.- A well-described methodology to improve the quality of longitudinal morbdity and mortality calculations in hospital-based cohorts of firearm injured patients.What is already known on this subject:- There is a need for robust, longitudinal data sources that reliably track morbidity and mortality among firearm injured patients in the United States.- The NDI is a well-established, comprehensive database that holds death records for all 50 states, which provides valuable mortality data to the public health and medical research community.

Citing Articles

Factors Associated With Recurrent Pediatric Firearm Injury : A 10-Year Retrospective Cohort Analysis.

Miller Z, Cooper B, Lew D, Ancona R, Moran V, Behr C Ann Intern Med. 2024; 177(10):1381-1388.

PMID: 39284184 PMC: 11537306. DOI: 10.7326/M24-0430.


Incidence of and Factors Associated With Recurrent Firearm Injury Among Patients Presenting to St. Louis Trauma Centers, 2010 to 2019 : A Cohort Study.

Mueller K, Cooper B, Moran V, Lew D, Ancona R, Landman J Ann Intern Med. 2023; 176(9):1163-1171.

PMID: 37639717 PMC: 11620286. DOI: 10.7326/M23-0069.

References
1.
Mueller K, Trolard A, Moran V, Landman J, Foraker R . Positioning public health surveillance for observational studies and clinical trials: The St. Louis region-wide hospital-based violence intervention program data repository. Contemp Clin Trials Commun. 2021; 21:100683. PMC: 7770475. DOI: 10.1016/j.conctc.2020.100683. View

2.
Fahimi J, Larimer E, Hamud-Ahmed W, Anderson E, Schnorr C, Yen I . Long-term mortality of patients surviving firearm violence. Inj Prev. 2015; 22(2):129-34. DOI: 10.1136/injuryprev-2015-041710. View

3.
Cook A, Hosmer D, Glance L, Kalesan B, Weinberg J, Rogers A . Population-Based Analysis of Firearm Injuries among Young Children in the United States, 2010-2015. Am Surg. 2019; 85(5):449-455. View

4.
Rowhani-Rahbar A, Zatzick D, Wang J, Mills B, Simonetti J, Fan M . Firearm-related hospitalization and risk for subsequent violent injury, death, or crime perpetration: a cohort study. Ann Intern Med. 2015; 162(7):492-500. DOI: 10.7326/M14-2362. View

5.
Pear V, McCort C, Kravitz-Wirtz N, Shev A, Rowhani-Rahbar A, Wintemute G . Risk factors for assaultive reinjury and death following a nonfatal firearm assault injury: A population-based retrospective cohort study. Prev Med. 2020; 139:106198. DOI: 10.1016/j.ypmed.2020.106198. View