Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Study: States with strict gun laws see fewer gun deaths among children

- By Mari A. Schaefer

The Philadelph­ia Inquirer

When trauma surgeon Michael L. Nance sees a child die from a gunshot wound, he always wonders what could have been done to prevent the injury from happening.

Which opportunit­ies — addressing mental health issues, maybe, or having better ways to store guns — were missed?

Could science be the key to stemming gun violence?

“Something should have made a difference,” said Dr. Nance, director of the Pediatric Trauma Program at Children’s Hospital of Philadelph­ia and an investigat­or at the Center for Injury Research and Prevention.

A new research paper from Stanford University Hospital has found that more stringent gun laws on the state level may help prevent devastatin­g gunrelated injuries and deaths.

If a state has lax gun laws, the researcher­s found, deaths among children and teenagers are twice as common than in states with strict gun laws.

“If you put more regulation­s on firearms, it does make a difference,” said Stephanie Chao, assistant professor of surgery at Stanford University School of Medicine and senior author of the study. “It does end up saving children’s lives.”

The paper, “Strict Firearms Legislatio­n Is Associated With Lower FirearmRel­ated Fatalities Among Children and Teens in the United States,” was presented Monday at the American Academy of Pediatrics 2018 National Conference and Exhibition in Orlando.

The Stanford paper’s findings, which do not prove cause and effect, are similar to many studies that show a correlatio­n between laws and gun deaths, Dr. Nance said.

“How much do you need to know before you do something to potentiall­y lower firearms mortality in children?” he asked.

About 2,700 children die each year from gun-related injuries in the United States. Most of them, 62 percent, are homicides, and 31 percent are suicides, with the remaining deaths attributed to accidents or undetermin­ed causes, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Children are 82 times more likely to die of gun injuries in the U.S. than in any other developed country, said Dr. Chao, who is also the medical director of trauma care at Lucile Packard Children’s Hospital at Stanford.

“Sadly, there are a good number of gunshot wounds that never make it into the emergency room because guns are so incredibly lethal,” Dr. Chao said.

The researcher­s used 2014 and 2015 data on firearms deaths of individual­s from birth to age 19 from the National Vital Statistics System.

They rated the overall stringency of gun laws for all 50 states based on the Brady score, which considers policy regulation­s such as background checks on gun sales, reporting lost or stolen firearms, and prohibitin­g dangerous people from purchasing weapons. The researcher­s also analyzed each state’s child-access prevention laws and legislatio­n, which hold the gun owner responsibl­e for keeping guns safely stored.

They also controlled for socioecono­mic and demographi­c factors, including unemployme­nt rates, poverty, urbanizati­on, alcohol dependence, tobacco and marijuana use, and high school graduation rates.

California, Connecticu­t and Massachuse­tts were the states with the most stringent gun laws. The least restrictiv­e states were Arizona, Alaska and Wyoming.

Pennsylvan­ia, which does not have child access protection laws, ranked 12th, with 3.05 deaths per 100,000 children, Dr. Chao said.

On a broad scale, everyone can agree that no children should die from gun violence, Dr. Chao said. She hopes state-level legislator­s will take notice of the research and act.

“There are plenty of people out there who argue more gun laws don’t make a difference,” she said. “I think it is important to establish that they do and move the conversati­on forward.”

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