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Showing Original Post only (View all)State firearm legislation and non-fatal injuries: What’s the relationship? [View all]
More than 30,000 people a year in the United States die from gunshot wounds, whether intentional or accidental. What we dont hear as much about are the tens of thousands more who are hurt by bullets but survive. In 2013, five people suffered non-fatal firearm injuries for every two who died, according to the national Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). From 2003 to 2013, 799,760 people sustained non-fatal injuries nearly 23 percent of which were accidental. This 10-year total includes 82,325 children age 17 and younger.
A number of state and federal laws have been enacted to curb such gun-related violence and accidental death and injury. But it is not clear how effective they have been. A 2005 study by a taskforce appointed by the CDC did not find enough evidence to determine whether federal and state gun laws reduced gun-related violence and injuries. A 2013 study from Harvard did find lower rates of gun-related deaths in states with more restrictive gun policies. The Harvard scholars who completed a 2006 study looking specifically at Child Access Prevention (CAP) laws, which aim to keep guns out of the hands of unsupervised children and teens, did note a larger reduction in accidental, gun-related child deaths in states that have such laws.
A team of researchers from Seattle have looked at the issue from another angle. Their August 2015 report published in the American Journal of Public Health, State Firearm Legislation and Nonfatal Firearm Injuries, examines whether stricter state laws are associated with fewer non-fatal gun injuries. The authors Joseph A. Simonetti, Ali Rowhani-Rahbar, Brianna Mills and Frederick P. Rivara of the Harborview Injury Prevention and Research Center at the University of Washington and Bessie Young of the SeattleDenver Center of Innovation at the VA Puget Sound Healthcare System studied 18 states. They analyzed patient data that had been reported in 2010 to the State Emergency Department Databases and to the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Projects State Inpatient Databases. The researchers focused on individuals who had been treated for a firearm injury in 2010 and were discharged alive from a medical facility. As part of its analysis, the team also assessed the strictness of gun legislation in those 18 states by using state scorecards created by the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence. Potential scores for each state ranged from 0 to 28, with higher scores indicating stricter laws.
http://journalistsresource.org/studies/society/public-health/state-firearm-legislation-non-fatal-injuries
A number of state and federal laws have been enacted to curb such gun-related violence and accidental death and injury. But it is not clear how effective they have been. A 2005 study by a taskforce appointed by the CDC did not find enough evidence to determine whether federal and state gun laws reduced gun-related violence and injuries. A 2013 study from Harvard did find lower rates of gun-related deaths in states with more restrictive gun policies. The Harvard scholars who completed a 2006 study looking specifically at Child Access Prevention (CAP) laws, which aim to keep guns out of the hands of unsupervised children and teens, did note a larger reduction in accidental, gun-related child deaths in states that have such laws.
A team of researchers from Seattle have looked at the issue from another angle. Their August 2015 report published in the American Journal of Public Health, State Firearm Legislation and Nonfatal Firearm Injuries, examines whether stricter state laws are associated with fewer non-fatal gun injuries. The authors Joseph A. Simonetti, Ali Rowhani-Rahbar, Brianna Mills and Frederick P. Rivara of the Harborview Injury Prevention and Research Center at the University of Washington and Bessie Young of the SeattleDenver Center of Innovation at the VA Puget Sound Healthcare System studied 18 states. They analyzed patient data that had been reported in 2010 to the State Emergency Department Databases and to the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Projects State Inpatient Databases. The researchers focused on individuals who had been treated for a firearm injury in 2010 and were discharged alive from a medical facility. As part of its analysis, the team also assessed the strictness of gun legislation in those 18 states by using state scorecards created by the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence. Potential scores for each state ranged from 0 to 28, with higher scores indicating stricter laws.
http://journalistsresource.org/studies/society/public-health/state-firearm-legislation-non-fatal-injuries
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State firearm legislation and non-fatal injuries: What’s the relationship? [View all]
SecularMotion
Aug 2015
OP
After accounting for differences in states’ socio-demographic characteristics and economic condition
the band leader
Aug 2015
#1
Also, check-out this chart comparing gun violence rates to district voting patterns in 2012.
branford
Aug 2015
#5
Inconvenient truths that can't be obscured via bafflegab are simply ignored
friendly_iconoclast
Aug 2015
#17
Per *your own source*, 9 of the 10 lowest crime states are pro gun:
friendly_iconoclast
Aug 2015
#15
Why doesn't the # of guns in the US correlate with violent crime rates?
friendly_iconoclast
Aug 2015
#16
After "accounting for socio-demographic characteristics and economic conditions,"
branford
Aug 2015
#8
comparing a state with less than 800,000 people to a state with over 38 million people
the band leader
Aug 2015
#24
Gun laws and non-fatal injuries = Controllers are constantly shooting themselves in the foot.
Nuclear Unicorn
Aug 2015
#4