Hill Terrence D, Dowd-Arrow Benjamin, Davis Andrew P, Burdette Amy M
The University of Arizona, School of Sociology, Social Sciences Building, Room 427, 1145 E. South Campus Drive, Tucson, AZ, 85721, USA.
Florida State University, Department of Sociology, 526 Bellamy Building, Tallahassee, FL, 32306, USA.
SSM Popul Health. 2020 Jan 7;10:100536. doi: 10.1016/j.ssmph.2020.100536. eCollection 2020 Apr.
Although there is no empirical evidence linking gun ownership with happiness, speculation is widespread. In this paper, we assess the association between gun ownership and happiness. We use 27 years of national cross-sectional data from the General Social Survey (1973-2018) and logistic regression to model self-rated happiness as a function of gun ownership (n = 37,960). In bivariate and partially adjusted models, we observed that the odds of being very happy were for respondents who reported having a gun in their home. This association persisted with adjustments for age, gender, race/ethnicity, education, employment status, household income, financial satisfaction, financial change, number of children, religious attendance, political affiliation, urban residence, region of interview, and survey year. In our fully adjusted model, gun ownership was to happiness. The original association between gun ownership and happiness was entirely confounded by marital status. In other words, gun owners only appeared happier because they are more likely to be married, which increases happiness. In the first study of gun ownership and happiness, we found that people who own guns and people who do not own guns tend to exhibit levels of happiness. This general pattern was consistent across nearly three decades of national surveys, a wide range of subgroups, and different measures of happiness. Our analyses are important because they contribute to our understanding of the epidemiology of happiness. They also indirectly challenge theoretical perspectives and cultural narratives about how guns contribute to feelings of safety, power, and pleasure.
虽然没有实证证据将枪支拥有与幸福联系起来,但这种猜测却很普遍。在本文中,我们评估枪支拥有与幸福之间的关联。我们使用了来自综合社会调查(1973 - 2018年)的27年全国横断面数据,并通过逻辑回归将自我评定的幸福作为枪支拥有情况的函数进行建模(n = 37,960)。在双变量和部分调整模型中,我们观察到,对于报告家中有枪的受访者来说,非常幸福的几率是 。在对年龄、性别、种族/民族、教育程度、就业状况、家庭收入、财务满意度、财务变化、子女数量、宗教活动参与度、政治派别、城市居住情况、访谈地区和调查年份进行调整后,这种关联依然存在。在我们的完全调整模型中,枪支拥有与幸福 。枪支拥有与幸福之间最初的关联完全被婚姻状况所混淆。换句话说,枪支拥有者看起来更幸福只是因为他们更有可能结婚,而结婚会增加幸福感。在关于枪支拥有与幸福的第一项研究中,我们发现拥有枪支的人和不拥有枪支的人往往表现出 的幸福水平。这种总体模式在近三十年的全国调查、广泛的亚组以及不同的幸福衡量标准中都是一致的。我们的分析很重要,因为它们有助于我们理解幸福的流行病学。它们还间接挑战了关于枪支如何促进安全感、权力感和愉悦感的理论观点和文化叙事。