Louisville Medicine Volume 66, Issue 3 | Page 16

VIOLENCE Banksy, Balloon Girl, 2002 GUN RELATED INJURIES IN CHILDREN: EXPERIENCE at a Pediatric Trauma Center Over Eight Years David S. Foley, MD A preschooler rode to work with her father one winter night. This was supposed to be a father-daughter bonding event, a chance for her to see what Daddy did on the job. Afterwards, as the two walked back to their car, a fight broke out nearby, shots were fired, and she was struck by a 9-mm bullet. She arrived in our ER about 30 minutes later, hemodynamically stable, but in obvious respiratory distress. Ultimately, the bullet was found to have entered near the base of her left neck, crossed through her left chest and exited her left lateral chest wall. She was intubated, 14 LOUISVILLE MEDICINE and a chest tube was placed in the ER for hemo-pneumothorax. We found no major vascular injuries, she was admitted to the ICU and spent over two weeks in the hospital. She needed thoracoscopic surgery for a retained hemothorax, and ultimately a thoracotomy and lung resection for persistent air leak. She was fortunate, in that she survived and recovered completely. Not surprisingly, her hospital stay was difficult not only physically but psychologically. While she required intensive medical and surgical care, the additional efforts of child life services, her expressive therapist and her inpatient child psychologist were equally important in her recovery. In caring for pediatric victims of violent crime, most of our