Gutierrez Carmen M, Prickett Kate C, Hollowell Claire, Teiko Pearl, Caton Lauren
Department of Public Policy, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA.
School of Government, Victoria University of Wellington, New Zealand.
Prev Med. 2022 Dec;165(Pt A):107244. doi: 10.1016/j.ypmed.2022.107244. Epub 2022 Sep 9.
After declining steadily for almost two decades, the rate of firearm suicide among adolescents (aged 15-19 years) has increased nearly every year since 2007. At the same time, overall levels of household firearm ownership have been declining. In this paper, we examined whether and how types of firearms in the homes of adolescents have changed over time, and the extent to which such changes are associated with trends in firearm suicides among adolescents. Our analyses focused on understanding these trends among Black and White male and female adolescents to better understand longstanding race-gender differences in firearm ownership and firearm suicide. With combined data from the General Social Survey (GSS) and the National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS), the findings show that handgun ownership in Black and White households increased over the last four decades, while overall levels of firearm ownership declined. Increases in handgun ownership were predictive of increased firearm suicide rates among White adolescents, especially among males. We found no significant relationship between firearm suicide among Black adolescents and firearm ownership among Black households, regardless of gun type, which is potentially unsurprising given that firearm ownership is substantially lower in Black households compared to White households. Possibly reflecting race and gender differences in household gun ownership, our findings also show that rates of firearm suicide were lower for Black and female adolescents and highest for White male adolescents. Taken together, these findings provide new evidence on the relationship between trends in firearm ownership and adolescent firearm suicide and address important questions about the influence of race and gender for understanding firearm suicide among adolescents.
在持续下降近二十年后,青少年(15至19岁)的枪支自杀率自2007年以来几乎每年都在上升。与此同时,家庭枪支拥有量的总体水平一直在下降。在本文中,我们研究了青少年家庭中枪支类型是否以及如何随时间变化,以及这些变化在多大程度上与青少年枪支自杀趋势相关。我们的分析重点是了解黑人和白人青少年男性和女性中的这些趋势,以便更好地理解枪支拥有和枪支自杀方面长期存在的种族性别差异。综合社会调查(GSS)和国家卫生统计中心(NCHS)的数据显示,在过去四十年中,黑人和白人家庭的手枪拥有量有所增加,而枪支拥有的总体水平有所下降。手枪拥有量的增加预示着白人青少年,尤其是男性的枪支自杀率上升。我们发现,无论枪支类型如何,黑人青少年的枪支自杀与黑人家庭的枪支拥有之间没有显著关系,鉴于黑人家庭的枪支拥有量与白人家庭相比大幅降低,这可能并不令人惊讶。我们的研究结果可能反映了家庭枪支拥有方面的种族和性别差异,还表明黑人和女性青少年的枪支自杀率较低,白人男性青少年的枪支自杀率最高。综上所述,这些发现为枪支拥有趋势与青少年枪支自杀之间的关系提供了新证据,并回答了有关种族和性别对理解青少年枪支自杀影响的重要问题。