Kawano Bradley, Agarwal Suresh, Krishnamoorthy Vijay, Raghunathan Karthik, Fernandez-Moure Joseph S, Haines Krista L
From the Division of Trauma, Acute, and Critical Care Surgery, Department of Surgery (Kawano, Agarwal, Fernandez-Moure, Haines), Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC.
the Department of Anesthesiology (Krishnamoorthy, Raghunathan), Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC.
J Am Coll Surg. 2023 Sep 1;237(3):409-418. doi: 10.1097/XCS.0000000000000753. Epub 2023 May 10.
Studying firearm-related mortality is important to reduce preventable firearm death in the US. This study aims to determine the relationship between firearm laws and assault death with firearms.
This ecologic study used public data from the CDC Wide-Ranging Online Data for Epidemiologic Research on decedents age 18 years or older who died from assault with firearms between 2009 and 2018 in all 50 states and Washington, DC. The outcomes were the rate of mortality per 100,000 persons from assault death by firearm used. Exposures of interest included the presence of 7 state firearm laws extracted from the RAND State Firearm Law Database. Welch's t tests were performed to compare mean mortality rate in states with each firearm law to states without each law.
There were 114,945 deaths from assault with firearms from 2009 to 2018. States with "stand your ground" laws had a higher assault mortality rate from all firearms and from other/unspecified firearms than states without stand your ground laws (p = 0.026; p = 0.023). States with background checks for private sales of handguns and long guns had a lower assault mortality rate from handguns and rifles, shotguns, and large firearms, respectively, than states without either law (p = 0.019; p = 0.030).
Stand your ground laws are correlated with a higher rate of gun-related assault death, but background checks on private sales are correlated with a lower rate. Future studies should elucidate the specific pathways by which state laws reduce, or fail to reduce, firearm-related assault death.
研究与枪支相关的死亡率对于减少美国可预防的枪支死亡至关重要。本研究旨在确定枪支法律与枪支袭击死亡之间的关系。
这项生态学研究使用了美国疾病控制与预防中心(CDC)广泛在线流行病学研究数据中的公共数据,这些数据来自2009年至2018年期间在美国50个州和华盛顿特区死于枪支袭击的18岁及以上死者。结果是每10万人中因使用枪支袭击死亡的死亡率。感兴趣的暴露因素包括从兰德州枪支法律数据库中提取的7项州枪支法律的存在情况。使用韦尔奇t检验来比较有每项枪支法律的州与没有该法律的州的平均死亡率。
2009年至2018年期间,有114,945人死于枪支袭击。与没有“保持原地”法律的州相比,有“保持原地”法律的州因所有枪支以及其他/未指明枪支导致的袭击死亡率更高(p = 0.026;p = 0.023)。与没有这两项法律的州相比,对私人销售手枪和长枪进行背景调查的州,分别因手枪以及步枪、霰弹枪和大型枪支导致的袭击死亡率更低(p = 0.019;p = 0.030)。
“保持原地”法律与较高的枪支相关袭击死亡率相关,但私人销售背景调查与较低的死亡率相关。未来的研究应阐明州法律减少或未能减少枪支相关袭击死亡的具体途径。