Khubchandani Jagdish, Price James H
Department of Public Health Sciences New Mexico State University Las Cruces New Mexico USA.
School of Population Health University of Toledo Toledo Ohio USA.
J Am Coll Emerg Physicians Open. 2020 Oct 21;2(1):e12293. doi: 10.1002/emp2.12293. eCollection 2021 Feb.
Amidst the COVID-19 pandemic crisis, firearm sales surged to record-breaking levels in the United States. The purpose of this study was to conduct a national assessment of the views of Americans on the change in firearm sales, the perceived impact of the changes in sales, and how these perceptions differ by a recent purchase of a firearm.
A multi-item valid and reliable questionnaire was deployed online via mTurk and social media sites in the last week of May 2020 to recruit adult Americans in the general population across the United States.
Among the total sample of study participants (n = 1432), almost a fifth (18%, n = 263) reported buying a firearm during the pandemic. Firearm buyers differed statistically significantly ( < 0.01) from non-buyers based on sex, age, ethnicity, marital status, education, having children at home, employment status, income, political orientation, location, and region of residence in the United States. Those who did not buy firearms during the pandemic were significantly ( < 0.01) more likely to believe that firearm sales and first-time ownership/buying of firearms had increased during the pandemic. Similarly, those who did not buy a firearm during the pandemic were significantly more likely to believe that the surge in firearm sales would result in increased firearm access for children, mentally ill, drug users, criminals, and older adults. In relation to perceived changes in selected public health outcomes attributed to the surge in firearm sales, firearm buyers were significantly less likely ( < 0.01) to believe that an increase in sales could result in adverse public health outcomes such as a higher number of suicides, homicides, mass shootings, and crimes in society. In multiple regression analyses, significant predictors of pandemic purchase of firearms were: having children at home, owning firearms before the pandemic, planning to buy firearms in the next year, knowing someone who was shot or killed with a firearm, and personally experiencing firearm violence in the past (ie, threatened or shot with a firearm).
This study delineated the characteristics of those who purchased a firearm during the pandemic and the reasons for such purchases during the COVID-19 pandemic. Additional research is needed to understand the long-term impact of firearm sales during the pandemic on public health.
在新冠疫情危机期间,美国枪支销量飙升至破纪录水平。本研究旨在对美国人关于枪支销售变化、销售变化的感知影响以及这些认知因近期是否购买枪支而产生的差异进行全国性评估。
2020年5月最后一周,通过mTurk和社交媒体网站在线发放一份多项目有效且可靠的问卷,以招募美国普通人群中的成年美国人。
在研究参与者总样本(n = 1432)中,近五分之一(18%,n = 263)报告在疫情期间购买了枪支。基于性别、年龄、种族、婚姻状况、教育程度、家中是否有孩子、就业状况、收入、政治倾向、地点以及在美国的居住地区,枪支购买者与非购买者在统计学上有显著差异(<0.01)。在疫情期间未购买枪支的人更有可能(<0.01)认为疫情期间枪支销售以及首次拥有/购买枪支的情况有所增加。同样,在疫情期间未购买枪支的人更有可能认为枪支销量的激增会导致儿童、精神疾病患者、吸毒者、罪犯和老年人更容易获得枪支。关于因枪支销售激增导致的选定公共卫生结果的感知变化,枪支购买者更不太可能(<0.01)认为销售增加会导致不良公共卫生结果,如自杀、杀人、大规模枪击和社会犯罪数量增加。在多元回归分析中,疫情期间购买枪支的显著预测因素包括:家中有孩子、疫情前拥有枪支、计划在明年购买枪支、认识被枪支射杀的人以及过去曾亲身经历枪支暴力(即受到枪支威胁或枪击)。
本研究描绘了在疫情期间购买枪支者的特征以及在新冠疫情期间进行此类购买的原因。需要进一步研究以了解疫情期间枪支销售对公共卫生的长期影响。