A look at a medical expertโs perspective on ammunition and lethality in relation to bullet caliber, weight, velocity and projectile type.
โKids in school are learning boater safety and not bleeding control.โ
I chuckled a bit as I listened to Lindsay Gietzen explain the absurdity of todayโs education system which often emphasizes denial and shameless propaganda.
โThey act like we live in a world without two, maybe three guns per individual. Violence rarely waits for politics, and the fact is education is politicizing the need for emergency care by way of denying reality. People get shot, and wishful thinking wonโt stitch up those wounds.โ
Gietzen is a person of incredible experience and equal amounts of sharp wit; the combination of those qualities makes her one of the worldโs leading experts and educators on traumatic injury care. Sheโs seen thousands of gunshot injuries in the worst part of Michigan and is now doing her best to get tourniquets and bleeding control kits right next to AED machines on the wall of every building.
The revelations here may surprise you, and perhaps youโll buy your own bleeding control kit after reading this.
How Bullets Kill
A gun needs to be two simple things: reliable and reliable againโeverything else coming in order of personal preference. Accuracy comes with practice and cosmetic choices are largely irrelevant, so as a baseline, the gun must function. Now what about bullets?
A good question to ask is, why there isnโt as much of an emphasis on reliable bullets? After all, the bullet is what matters most. Thereโs a tremendous amount of science that goes into creating more advanced projectiles that guarantee superior performance.
โWhat causes death isnโt really kinetic force or expansion,โ said Gietzen. โWhat causes death is rapid exsanguination (blood loss). A hit to the central nervous system or head does not guarantee an instantaneous kill. Despite what you see in the movies, the survival rate for wounds to extremities is very high, and death becomes more likely the closer you get to the heart of major arteries. The most deadly places to hit are the groin, armpits or a major artery in the torso.โ
So, what then constitutes an effective bullet?
โThereโs nothing that says that a bullet that passes through-and-through is more deadly,โ added Gietzen. โItโs also untrue that it causes more bleeding, because itโs all one wound. As for bullets that remain in the body, we end up leaving them in many cases.โ
Gietzen continued: โWhen it comes to multiple injuries, thereโs no real case that says more bullet holes in more places cause more bleeding. In fact, even a person shot once may not bleed externally. Almost all the blood in the body can be held in the pelvis, and itโs not uncommon for a gunshot victim to bleed externally in a way that does not appear to be life threatening.โ
A healthy person can lose up to 40 percent of their blood and survive. Thereโs no set method to deprive a person of 41 percent, nor is there a means to predict whatโll happen when larger or smaller individuals are shot. In humans, damage a bullet does is often less related to velocity or mass, but rather the immediate aftermath and medical treatment given.
In a mass causality event, shooters often use rifles. It should be noted that at Columbine there wasnโt an AR-15 or AK-47 used: It was pistol-caliber guns and a shotgun. The Virginia Tech shooting was carried out with two pistols, a .22 LR and a 9mm. That shooting left 32 dead and 17 injured by shooting. In these mass casualty events, itโs not necessarily the initial injury that kills on contact, but the response time to care and neutralizing the threat so help can arrive.
โWhen we have a victim brought in, we often donโt immediately know what theyโve been shot with โฆ or even how many times theyโve been shot,โ said Gietzen. โWe find the most severe injures and begin treating those first. And not every hospital is equipped to deal with gunshot injuries. Bleeding control is being heavily pushed in the medical community, this being tourniquet application and wound packing. Stop that bleeding and the survival rate goes way up.โ
How important is knowing bleeding control skills in these situations? Gietzen sent me documentation from the Berkley et al Journal of Trauma, 2008, which stated that in modern combat in Iraq, four out of seven deaths might have been prevented with early tourniquet use. It also stated that 57 percent of deaths in general would be preventable with early bleeding control and tourniquet use.
Calibers and Effectiveness
So, why does all this matter to the average CCW citizen, and how should it affect their decisions on which bullets to load โฆ and what trauma gear to have close at hand?
In the weeks leading up to the writing of this article, I spoke to several medical staff who worked post-mortem. Those individuals chose to remain anonymous, but their information was somewhat inconclusive in terms of what calibers were more effective. It should be noted that not all bullets are recovered, and aside from law enforcement, where the number and location of shots fired is recorded in reference to a duty weapon, there isnโt a tremendously detailed picture of the answer.
The general (and predictable) consensus was that the most common CCW calibers see the most action. They all agreed that, from a medical perspective, there was no noticeable or real-world difference between .380 ACP, .38 Special, .357 Magnum and 40-caliber.
The only major standout was .45 ACP, where it resulted in about twice the fatality rate as the others, even to extremities.
Very little relevant information was available on .22 LR, .25 ACP or larger rounds like the .44 Magnum, simply because these are rarer selections for concealed carry.
There was no positive correlation with death based on bullet type used. Said another way, again from this medical perspective, hollow-points arenโt any more effective in practical applications than a FMJ. Of note is the Black Hills HoneyBadger line, which features solid, non-expanding bullets designed to cause more tissue damage (bleeding) by means of fluid dynamics due to bullet rotation, thus making them barrier-blind as long as the bullet is spinning.
These numbers were quite similar to the 2018 study exhaustively titled, โThe Association of Firearm Caliber With Likelihood of Death From Gunshot Injury in Criminal Assaults,โ which determined that larger caliber guns were more likely to inflict death.
Overall, this study, while including a large sample group, was realistically and fundamentally flawed in that it grouped a wide number of calibers into seemingly random clusters, even grouping .45 ACP with 7.62x39mm! It rated large bullets (irrespective of speed or weight, a .45 ACP is typically a 230-grain bullet at 850 fps and a 7.62 is a 123-grain bullet at 2,400 fps) as 4.5 times more likely to kill than with smaller calibers.
But again, the conclusion is noteworthy in that larger caliber guns were more likely to inflict death.
Do Bullet Types Even Matter?
Itโs my belief, based on my experience and that of professionals far smarter than me, that most bullet designs have less bearing on lethality than where that bullet goes. Shot placement, not caliber used or bullet type used, is the major deciding factor in lethality. This might be a no-brainer, but there is no doubt that the merits of bullet type will be debated for years to come.
In the meantime, take a bleeding control class. Should the worst happen, it will likely be far more useful than deciding between 9mm and .45 ACP.
Read the original article in its entirety on gundigest.com.
5 Comments
Good article, putting this information into layman’s terms.
From the article:.
“…there was no noticeable or real-world difference between .380 ACP, .38 Special, .357 Magnum and 40-caliber.”
Can we then assume that 9mm Luger is included in that group? It has become a hugely popular and common caliber for EDC.
It was also nice to receive validation on something I have said for many years… It’s not the size, it’s the placement.
There have been many, many people killed with ,22s. I am pretty sure they weren’t laughing after they got hit with a little “mouse fart” round.
Yes, a 22 to the noggin gets their attention.
So hydro-static shock means nothing to this guy? The 5.56 and similar rounds have killed people nicely for the last 50+ years and will continue to do so despite propaganda to the contrary.
You’re correct but it remains difficult to conceal carry an AR.
Which part of MEDICAL experience shows no real world difference based on size or type of bullet do you REFUSE to understand. It is shot PLACEMENT that matters. Yes, the rounds you mention, along with EVERY OTHER rounds is reliably lethal when penetrating vital organs or large blood vessels. NO, they are NOT reliably lethal when not penetrating such areas.
It is YOU that has demonstrated lack of understanding of hydro-static shock.