Azrael D, Miller M, Hemenway D
Harvard Injury Control Research Center, Harvard School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts 02115, USA.
Pediatrics. 2000 Sep;106(3):E31. doi: 10.1542/peds.106.3.e31.
To determine gun storage practices in gun-owning households with children.
National random digit-dial telephone survey of 2521 households conducted in March 1999 through July 1999. This study uses a subsample of 434 households with children <18 years old in which a respondent reported either: 1) personally owning a gun, or 2) living in a gun-owning household but not owning a gun themselves. Respondents were asked whether any household gun was currently stored loaded, and, if yes, whether any gun was currently stored loaded and unlocked.
Twenty-one percent of gun owners compared with 7% of non-owners reported that a household gun was stored loaded, while 9% and 2%, respectively, reported that a household gun was stored loaded and unlocked. Non-gun owners were significantly more likely than were gun owners to be female (87% vs 22%) and to report that they lived in a house with only 1 gun (70% vs 57%) and no handguns (51% vs 31%). Based on the reports of actual gun owners (n = 252), households with children <13 years old were significantly less likely to store a gun loaded and unlocked (multivariate odds ratio:.1; 95% confidence interval:.0,.4) than were households with teenagers only.
We find that among gun-owning households with children, non-gun owners report significantly lower rates of guns stored loaded and unlocked than do gun owners. These findings are consistent with recent studies that have found that married men are far more likely to report household gun ownership than are married women, and that gun users are far more likely to report that a gun is stored loaded or loaded and unlocked than are never users. Our findings suggest that non-gun owners, the vast majority of whom are women (87%), may be unaware that guns in their homes are stored in a manner that experts agree is unsafe. Our findings reinforce the importance of many pediatricians' current efforts to offer anticipatory guidance about firearms to gun-owning families, and, in addition, suggest that this guidance can be adapted depending on whether the physician is speaking with a gun-owning or non-gun-owning parent. In particular, because gun owners (mostly fathers) are less likely to bring children to the pediatrician's office than are non-owners (mostly mothers), physicians should take advantage of any opportunities that they have to address gun-related issues with parents who personally own guns. More commonly, physicians can encourage non-gun owners to participate more fully in household decision-making about gun storage by letting them know not only about recommended storage practices, but also that many non-owners may not know how guns are actually stored in their own homes. firearm, storage, children, survey.
确定有孩子的持枪家庭的枪支存放方式。
1999年3月至1999年7月对2521户家庭进行的全国随机数字拨号电话调查。本研究使用了一个包含434户有18岁以下孩子家庭的子样本,其中一名受访者报告了以下两种情况之一:1)个人拥有枪支,或2)生活在有枪家庭但自己不拥有枪支。受访者被问及家中是否有任何枪支目前处于上膛存放状态,如果是,是否有任何枪支目前处于上膛且未上锁的存放状态。
21%的枪支拥有者报告家中枪支处于上膛存放状态,而非枪支拥有者的这一比例为7%;分别有9%和2%的枪支拥有者和非枪支拥有者报告家中枪支处于上膛且未上锁的存放状态。非枪支拥有者比枪支拥有者更可能为女性(87%对22%),且更可能报告他们居住的房子里只有1支枪(70%对57%)且没有手枪(51%对31%)。根据实际枪支拥有者(n = 252)的报告,有13岁以下孩子的家庭将枪支上膛且未上锁存放的可能性显著低于只有青少年的家庭(多变量优势比:0.1;95%置信区间:0.0,0.4)。
我们发现,在有孩子的持枪家庭中,非枪支拥有者报告的枪支上膛且未上锁存放的比例显著低于枪支拥有者。这些发现与最近的研究一致,即已婚男性比已婚女性更可能报告家中拥有枪支,且枪支使用者比从未使用者更可能报告枪支处于上膛或上膛且未上锁的存放状态。我们的发现表明,非枪支拥有者(其中绝大多数是女性,占87%)可能没有意识到家中枪支的存放方式在专家看来是不安全的。我们的发现强化了许多儿科医生目前为持枪家庭提供有关枪支的预期指导的努力的重要性,此外,还表明这种指导可以根据医生是与持枪还是非持枪的家长交谈而进行调整。特别是,由于枪支拥有者(大多是父亲)比非枪支拥有者(大多是母亲)带孩子去儿科医生办公室的可能性更小,医生应利用一切机会与亲自拥有枪支的家长讨论与枪支相关的问题。更常见的是,医生可以鼓励非枪支拥有者更充分地参与家庭关于枪支存放的决策,不仅要让他们了解推荐的存放方式,还要让他们知道许多非枪支拥有者可能不知道自己家中枪支的实际存放情况。枪支、存放、儿童、调查。