San Francisco Chronicle

19 kids killed or injured in shootings daily, study finds

- By Lindsey Tanner Lindsey Tanner is an Associated Press writer.

CHICAGO — Shootings kill or injure at least 19 U.S. children each day, with boys, teenagers and blacks most at risk, according to a study published Monday that paints a bleak portrait of persistent violence.

The analysis of 2002-14 U.S. data is billed as the most comprehens­ive study on the topic. While it mostly confirms previously released informatio­n, it underscore­s why researcher­s view gun violence as a public health crisis.

The report from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention involves children and teens through age 17. It was compiled by analyzing death certificat­es and emergency room reports. Among the findings published in the journal Pediatrics:

The yearly toll is nearly 1,300 deaths and almost 6,000 nonfatal gunshot wounds — most of them intentiona­l.

The annual death rate is nearly 2 out of 100,000 children — the rate is double for blacks — while nonfatal gunshot wounds injure almost 8 out of 100,000 children each year.

Suicides increased from 200714, from 325 to 532. The suicide rate increased 60 percent over those years to 1.6 per 100,000. One-third of these children were depressed, and most had experience­d a recent crisis, including relationsh­ip breakups and problems at school.

Homicides fell from 2007-14, from 1,038 to 699, the rate dropping by 36 percent to less than 1 per 100,000.

Most unintentio­nal deaths resulted from playing with guns and unintentio­nally pulling the trigger. Most victims were bystanders although among children up to age 10 in this group, more than 40 percent accidental­ly shot themselves.

The report notes that unintentio­nal shooting deaths may be significan­tly underrepor­ted, which was highlighte­d in a report by the Associated Press and USA TODAY Network. The news organizati­ons found during the first six months of 2016, minors died from accidental shootings — at their own hands, or at the hands of other children or adults — at a pace of one every other day, far more than limited federal statistics indicate.

Congress has prohibited the CDC from using federal money to advocate or promote gun control. CDC spokeswoma­n Courtney Lenard said the congressio­nal directive “does not prohibit CDC from conducting public health research into gun violence” and the agency continues to do so.

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