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Judge temporarily blocks effort to deport Palestinian activist who helped lead Columbia student protests; Power of rural organizing reflected in SD carbon pipeline law; Safety at risk as budget cuts hit Indiana Dunes National Park; Barriers to tracking bird flu mount amid federal changes.

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House Democrats won't back the GOP budget bill. Ontario reacts to Trump trade moves by enacting energy export tariffs, and a new report finds mass deportations don t help the labor market.

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Immigrant communities are getting advice from advocates as the reach of ICE expands, experts in rural America urge lawmakers to ramp up protections against elder abuse, and a multi-state arts projects seeks to close the urban-rural divide.

Study links pandemic with uptick in pediatric trauma cases

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Tuesday, October 24, 2023   

Medical researchers are out with new findings, which underscore how some communities saw more devastating effects of the COVID-19 pandemic. The new study focuses on pediatric trauma cases, and a Minnesota doctor said it mirrors what he is seeing.

The data, posted by the American College of Surgeons, showed childhood trauma rates increased during the pandemic and were disproportionately higher for kids in disadvantaged areas. For example, gunshot wounds for young patients in those communities were nearly 3% higher, and car crash injuries were 5% higher.

Dr. Andrew Kiragu at the Children's Minnesota health system said the results are not surprising.

"It is in line with, unfortunately, what we've been seeing: an increase in the number of children with injuries," Kiragu reported. "Particularly, of course, we are concerned about firearm-related injuries."

The report's authors pointed out the initial findings do not get to the bottom of what role the pandemic might have played, and argued more research is needed. But they said it is fair to question whether factors such as the loss of a caregiver, lack of child care options for front line workers and erratic social behavior were at play. They emphasized it creates more urgency for preventive efforts by health care institutions and policymakers.

Kiragu agreed addressing this problem should be a multipronged approach.

"Whether it's through after-school programs, and violence interrupter programs," Kiragu outlined. "Then of course within the hospitals that care for these kids; hospital-based violence injury prevention programs."

He suggested it is worth exploring school crossing zones in these areas and whether more safety implements are needed. For the broader population, the researchers say motor vehicle-related injuries increased among pediatric cases from nearly 13% pre-pandemic to more than 18% later in the crisis. Gunshot wounds increased by nearly one percentage point.


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