Valek Rebecca, Ward Julie A, Jones Vanya, Crifasi Cassandra K
Department of Health Policy and Management, Center for Gun Violence Solutions, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA.
School of Public Health, Oregon Health and Science University-Portland State University, Portland, OR, USA.
Inj Epidemiol. 2024 Sep 6;11(1):48. doi: 10.1186/s40621-024-00527-z.
U.S. firearm sales surged during the COVID-19 pandemic, with many purchases by first-time firearm owners. The 2023 National Survey of Gun Policy sought to understand the public health implications of this surge by comparing the purchasing motivations and firearm policy views of pandemic-era first-time purchasers to prior gun owners.
We fielded a nationally representative public opinion survey of U.S. adults (n = 3096) from 1/4/23 to 2/6/23. We oversampled for gun owners and Black, Hispanic, and Asian Americans. Survey weights were applied to generate representative estimates. New gun owners were identified through affirmative responses to: "Have you bought any guns since January 1, 2020?" and "Did you buy your first gun after January 1, 2020?" Recent purchasers were additionally asked whether concerns of 1) political or 2) racial violence motivated their purchase. Purchase motivations and gun policy support were examined among new and prior gun owners (n = 1002) and compared using logistic regression and predictive probabilities.
Overall, 11% of respondents reported purchasing a gun since 1/1/20, 35% for the first time. Among recent purchasers, larger proportions of Democrat, Black, Asian, and Hispanic respondents were new gun owners than Republican or white respondents. Compared to prior owners, odds were 4.5-times higher that new gun owners' recent purchase was motivated by racial violence and 3.2-times higher for political violence. Majority support was found for protective gun policies, with few differences by purchase recency or motivations. The only policy for which support by new and prior gun owners differed significantly was the permit-to-purchase policy (76% v. 63%, respectively). Similarly, few significant differences in support were observed when stratifying by purchase motivation. Notably, both those who reported recent purchase motivations of racial violence and of political violence expressed significantly higher support for a "stand-your-ground" policy compared to those who did not report such motivations.
Racial and political violence appear to be larger concerns among new gun owners, motivating purchasing among demographic groups with traditionally lower gun ownership rates. These findings suggest a need for safety assurances amid racial and political tensions and growing gun ownership. Gun owners' support for such policies remains strong.
在新冠疫情期间,美国枪支销量激增,许多枪支是首次购枪者购买的。2023年全国枪支政策调查旨在通过比较疫情时期首次购枪者与之前的枪支拥有者的购买动机和枪支政策观点,来了解这一激增现象对公共健康的影响。
我们于2023年1月4日至2月6日对美国成年人进行了一项具有全国代表性的民意调查(n = 3096)。我们对枪支拥有者以及黑人、西班牙裔和亚裔美国人进行了过度抽样。应用调查权重以生成具有代表性的估计值。通过对以下问题的肯定回答来确定新的枪支拥有者:“自2020年1月1日以来,你是否购买过任何枪支?”以及“你是否在2020年1月1日之后购买了你的第一支枪?”还询问了近期购枪者,他们的购买是否受到1)政治或2)种族暴力担忧的驱使。在新的和之前的枪支拥有者(n = 1002)中研究购买动机和对枪支政策的支持情况,并使用逻辑回归和预测概率进行比较。
总体而言,11%的受访者报告自2020年1月1日以来购买过枪支,其中35%是首次购买。在近期购枪者中,民主党、黑人、亚裔和西班牙裔受访者中新枪支拥有者的比例高于共和党或白人受访者。与之前的枪支拥有者相比,新枪支拥有者近期购买枪支受种族暴力驱使的可能性高出4.5倍,受政治暴力驱使的可能性高出3.2倍。对保护性枪支政策存在多数支持,购买时间远近或动机方面差异不大。新的和之前的枪支拥有者支持率存在显著差异的唯一政策是购买许可政策(分别为76%和63%)。同样,按购买动机分层时,支持率的显著差异也很少。值得注意的是,与未报告此类动机的人相比,那些报告近期购买动机是种族暴力和政治暴力的人对“坚守阵地”政策的支持率明显更高。
种族和政治暴力似乎是新枪支拥有者更为关注的问题,促使传统上枪支拥有率较低的人群购买枪支。这些发现表明,在种族和政治紧张局势以及枪支拥有量不断增加的情况下,需要安全保障。枪支拥有者对这类政策的支持仍然强劲。