Gj. Ordog et al., CIVILIAN GUNSHOT WOUNDS - OUTPATIENT MANAGEMENT, The journal of trauma, injury, infection, and critical care, 36(1), 1994, pp. 106-111
Cost containment is important in this time of inner-city economic and
health-care crisis. Of 28,150 patients treated for gunshot wounds (GSW
s) from 1977 through 1991, 16,892 (60%) were treated as outpatients af
ter emergency department evaluation and treatment. The complication ra
te was 1.8% (mostly infections), and nine patients were later found to
have vascular injuries requiring surgical treatment. These were ident
ified later at outpatient follow-up and treated with no long-term morb
idity or mortality. A conservative estimate of the cost savings from t
his study was more than $37 million. With a more liberal use of angiog
raphy to eliminate rare missed vascular injuries, many GSW victims can
be safely treated as outpatients, eliminating the need for expensive
in-hospital observation.