Centre for Global Health Research, Dalla Lana School of Public Health, St Michael's Hospital, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada.
Instituto Nacional de Salud Pública, Cuernavaca, Mexico.
Lancet Public Health. 2019 Jun;4(6):e281-e290. doi: 10.1016/S2468-2667(19)30018-0. Epub 2019 May 21.
Firearm mortality is a leading, and largely avoidable, cause of death in the USA, Mexico, Brazil, and Colombia. We aimed to assess the changes over time and demographic determinants of firearm deaths in these four countries between 1990 and 2015.
In this comparative analysis of firearm mortality, we examined national vital statistics data from 1990-2015 from four publicly available data repositories in the USA, Mexico, Brazil, and Colombia. We extracted medically-certified deaths and underlying population denominators to calculate the age-specific and sex-specific firearm deaths and the risk of firearm mortality at the national and subnational level, by education for all four countries, and by race or ethnicity for the USA and Brazil. Analyses were stratified by intent (homicide, suicide, unintentional, or undetermined). We quantified avoidable mortality for each country using the lowest number of subnational age-specific and period-specific death rates.
Between 1990 and 2015, 106·3 million medically-certified deaths were recorded, including 2 472 000 firearm deaths, of which 851 000 occurred in the USA, 272 000 in Mexico, 855 000 in Brazil, and 494 000 in Colombia. Homicides accounted for most of the firearm deaths in Mexico (225 000 [82·7%]), Colombia (463 000 [93·8%]), and Brazil (766 000 [89·5%]). Suicide accounted for more than half of all firearm deaths in the USA (479 000 [56·3%]). In each country, firearm mortality was highest among men aged 15-34 years, accounting for up to half of the total risk of death in that age group. During the study period, firearm mortality risks increased in Mexico and Brazil but decreased in the USA and Colombia, with marked national and subnational geographical variation. Young men with low educational attainment were at increased risk of firearm homicide in all four countries, and in the USA and Brazil, black and brown men, respectively, were at the highest risk. The risk of firearm homicide was 14 times higher in black men in the USA aged 25-34 years with low educational attainment than comparably-educated white men (1·52% [99% CI 1·50-1·54] vs 0·11% [0·10-0·12]), and up to four times higher than in comparably-educated men in Brazil, Colombia, and Mexico. In the USA, the risk of firearm homicide was more than 30 times higher in black men with post-secondary education than comparably educated white men. If countries could achieve the same firearm mortality rates nationally as in their lowest-burden states, 1 777 800 firearm deaths at all ages and in both sexes could be avoided, including 1 028 000 deaths in men aged 15-34 years.
Firearm mortality in the USA, Mexico, Brazil, and Colombia is highest among young adult men, and is strongly associated with race and ethnicity, and low education levels. Reductions in firearm deaths would improve life expectancy, particularly for black men in the USA, and would reduce racial and educational disparities in mortality.
Canadian Institutes of Health Research and the University of Toronto Connaught Global Challenge.
在美国、墨西哥、巴西和哥伦比亚,枪支死亡率是主要的、在很大程度上可避免的死亡原因。本研究旨在评估这四个国家在 1990 年至 2015 年期间枪支死亡率的时间变化趋势和人口决定因素。
在这项关于枪支死亡率的比较分析中,我们检查了来自美国、墨西哥、巴西和哥伦比亚四个公开可用的数据库的 1990-2015 年国家生命统计数据。我们提取了经医学证明的死亡和基础人口数,以计算四个国家的年龄和性别特异性枪支死亡率,以及按教育程度计算的所有四个国家和按种族或族裔计算的美国和巴西的国家和次国家级枪支死亡率。分析按意图(凶杀、自杀、意外或不明)分层。我们通过使用最低数量的次国家级年龄特异性和时期特异性死亡率来量化每个国家的可避免死亡率。
1990 年至 2015 年间,共记录了 1.063 亿例经医学证明的死亡,包括 247.2 万例枪支死亡,其中 85.1 万例发生在美国,27.2 万例发生在墨西哥,855 万例发生在巴西,49.4 万例发生在哥伦比亚。凶杀案占墨西哥(225 万[82.7%])、哥伦比亚(46.3 万[93.8%])和巴西(76.6 万[89.5%])枪支死亡的大部分。在美国,自杀占所有枪支死亡的一半以上(47.9 万[56.3%])。在每个国家,15-34 岁的男性枪支死亡率最高,占该年龄段总死亡风险的一半以上。在研究期间,墨西哥和巴西的枪支死亡率风险增加,而美国和哥伦比亚则降低,具有明显的国家和次国家级地理差异。受教育程度低的年轻男性在所有四个国家以及在美国和巴西面临更高的枪支凶杀风险,而黑人和棕色人种的男性分别面临最高的风险。在受教育程度低的 25-34 岁美国黑人男性中,枪支凶杀风险比可比受教育程度的白人男性高 14 倍(1.52%[99%CI 1.50-1.54]比 0.11%[0.10-0.12]),而与巴西、哥伦比亚和墨西哥可比受教育程度的男性相比,风险高至四倍。在美国,受过中学后教育的黑人男性的枪支凶杀风险比可比受教育程度的白人男性高 30 多倍。如果各国能够在全国范围内达到与负担最低的州相同的枪支死亡率,那么可以避免所有年龄段和性别的 177.78 万例枪支死亡,包括 15-34 岁男性的 102.8 万例死亡。
在美国、墨西哥、巴西和哥伦比亚,枪支死亡率在年轻成年男性中最高,与种族和族裔以及低教育程度密切相关。降低枪支死亡率将提高预期寿命,特别是对美国的黑人男性,并将减少死亡率方面的种族和教育差距。
加拿大卫生研究院和多伦多大学康诺特全球挑战。