Pediatric Firearm Survivors as a Medically Complex Population.

Firearm injury is now the leading cause of death among children and adolescents in the United States, yet far more children survive gunshot wounds and encounter substantial long-term consequences. This article argues that pediatric firearm survivors constitute a population of children with medical complexity, a group defined by severe chronic health conditions, significant functional limitations, substantial service needs, and high health care utilization. Survivors often experience multisystem trauma, neurological impairment, chronic pain, organ dysfunction, and enduring functional deficits requiring long-term rehabilitation, medical technology, and educational and psychosocial support. Families frequently manage intensive caregiving responsibilities and navigate fragmented systems of care. Survivors also demonstrate elevated mental health needs and high rates of readmissions, subspecialty care, and emergency visits, reflecting chronic and resource-intensive trajectories. By applying established frameworks for children with medical complexity, this article reframes firearm survivorship as a chronic condition rather than a discrete traumatic event.Recognizing pediatric firearm survivors as medically complex has important implications for hospice and palliative care nursing practice. Such recognition supports trauma-informed, longitudinal models of palliative care and highlights the need for targeted interventions that address the persistent medical, functional, and psychosocial burdens of this growing population.
Mental Health
Care/Management

Authors

Lindley Lindley, Weaver Weaver
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