Correll-King Wesley M, Crifasi Cassandra, Gamarel Kristi E
Department of Health Behavior and Health Equity, University of Michigan School of Public Health, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, United States.
Population Studies Center, Institute for Social Research, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48106, United States.
Ann Behav Med. 2025 Jan 4;59(1). doi: 10.1093/abm/kaae094.
Firearms-related health sciences research has documented disparities in fatal and nonfatal firearm injury impacting populations in the United States defined by race and ethnicity, age, gender, and geography. Recent reports from research and advocacy organizations have highlighted a need for this research to include sexual and gender minority (ie, lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer [LGBTQ+]) populations to guide public health efforts to prevent homicide, suicide, and injury.
The current review examines and summarizes existing research related to firearms and LGBTQ+ populations in the United States.
A search of PubMed, Embase, CINAHL, PsycInfo, LGBT Life, and Scopus was conducted in May 2024 using search strings related to LGBTQ+ populations, firearms, and suicide. Articles were included in this review if they were peer-reviewed, empirical studies assessing any construct related to firearms among LGBTQ+ people in the United States.
Ultimately, 35 studies were included. Constructs examined in included studies were suicide (n = 6), homicide (n = 4), responses to the Pulse nightclub shooting (n = 9), nonfatal interpersonal violence (n = 4), and firearm access and ownership (n = 12).
Findings identified substantial gaps in the literature, underscoring an urgent need for LGBTQ+ health researchers and firearm injury prevention researchers to collaboratively extend and improve the evidence base on firearms among LGBTQ+ populations. Key recommendations include improving Sexual Orientation and Gender Identity data collection in firearms research, collecting original data to address LGBTQ+-specific and LGBTQ+-inclusive research questions regarding firearms, broadening the scope of firearms constructs assessed among LGTBQ+ populations, and using intersectionality to guide future research.
与枪支相关的健康科学研究记录了在美国,按种族和族裔、年龄、性别及地理位置划分的人群在致命和非致命枪支伤害方面存在的差异。研究和倡导组织最近的报告强调,此类研究需要纳入性取向和性别少数群体(即女同性恋、男同性恋、双性恋、跨性别者和酷儿[LGBTQ+]),以指导预防杀人、自杀和伤害的公共卫生工作。
本综述审视并总结了美国现有与枪支及LGBTQ+群体相关的研究。
2024年5月,在PubMed、Embase、CINAHL、PsycInfo、LGBT Life和Scopus数据库中进行检索,使用与LGBTQ+群体、枪支和自杀相关的检索词。如果文章经过同行评审且为实证研究,评估了美国LGBTQ+人群中与枪支相关的任何构念,则纳入本综述。
最终纳入35项研究。纳入研究中所考察的构念包括自杀(n = 6)、杀人(n = 4)、对奥兰多脉动夜总会枪击案的反应(n = 9)、非致命人际暴力(n = 4)以及枪支获取与拥有情况(n = 12)。
研究结果表明文献中存在重大空白,突出表明LGBTQ+健康研究人员和枪支伤害预防研究人员迫切需要合作,以扩展和完善LGBTQ+人群中关于枪支的证据基础。主要建议包括在枪支研究中改善性取向和性别认同数据收集,收集原始数据以解决关于枪支的LGBTQ+特定和LGBTQ+包容性研究问题,拓宽在LGTBQ+人群中评估的枪支构念范围,以及运用交叉性理论指导未来研究。