Department of Emergency Medicine, School of Medicine, University of Colorado, Aurora, Colorado, USA.
VA Eastern Colorado Geriatric Research Education and Clinical Center, Rocky Mountain Regional VA Medical Center, Aurora, Colorado, USA.
Gerontologist. 2023 May 9;63(4):717-730. doi: 10.1093/geront/gnac142.
Age-associated changes can impair abilities for safe driving and the use of firearms. We sought to examine multiple perspectives on reducing access to firearms, including similarities and differences compared to reducing driving.
Online focus groups and 1-on-1 interviews were conducted (November 2020 to May 2021) in the United States with: older adults who drove and owned firearms; family members of older adult firearm owners/drivers; professionals in aging-related agencies; and firearm retailers/instructors. Recorded sessions were transcribed, coded, and analyzed following a mixed inductive-deductive thematic analysis process.
Among 104 participants (81 in focus groups, 23 in interviews), 50 (48%) were female, and 92 (88%) White. Key similarities: decisions are emotional and challenging; needs change over time; safety concerns are heightened by new impairments; prior experiences prompt future planning; tension between autonomy and reliance on trusted others; and strategies like reframing may ease transitions and avoid confrontations. Key differences: "retirement" was not an acceptable term for firearms; reducing driving may affect daily independence more, but there are few alternatives for the psychological safety conferred by firearms; and there are specific firearm-related legal concerns but more driving-related regulations, policies, and resources.
The similarities and differences in the processes and preferences related to reducing driving or firearm access have implications for the development of resources to support planning and action. Such resources for the public and providers might empower older adults and their families to make voluntary, shared decisions, and reduce injuries and deaths.
与年龄相关的变化可能会损害安全驾驶和使用枪支的能力。我们试图从多个角度探讨减少枪支获取途径的问题,包括与减少驾驶相关的异同点。
2020 年 11 月至 2021 年 5 月,我们在美国进行了在线焦点小组和 1 对 1 访谈,参与者包括:有驾驶和持枪经验的老年人;老年持枪者/驾驶者的家庭成员;与老龄化相关机构的专业人士;以及枪支零售商/教练。记录的会议经过转录、编码和分析,采用混合归纳演绎主题分析方法。
在 104 名参与者(81 人参加焦点小组,23 人参加访谈)中,50 人(48%)为女性,92 人(88%)为白人。主要相似点:决策是情绪化和具有挑战性的;需求会随时间而变化;新出现的身体损伤会加剧安全问题;以往的经历会促使人们对未来进行规划;自主和依赖可信赖的他人之间存在紧张关系;重新定义等策略可能会缓解过渡和避免冲突。主要差异:“退休”这个词不适用于枪支;减少驾驶可能会对日常独立性产生更大影响,但对于枪支带来的心理安全感,几乎没有替代方案;而且存在特定的与枪支相关的法律问题,但有更多与驾驶相关的法规、政策和资源。
与减少驾驶或枪支获取相关的过程和偏好的异同点,对开发支持规划和行动的资源具有重要意义。面向公众和服务提供者的此类资源可以使老年人及其家人能够做出自愿、共同的决策,并减少伤害和死亡。