Politicians and news media coverage have fueled a widespread belief that gun violence primarily affects urban communities. But researchers are urging the public to understand that shootings are a universal issue — and that many rural Americans experience higher rates of gun death than their big-city counterparts, reports The Trace.
That’s the thrust of a new research letter, published April 26 in the Journal of the American
Medical Association, which found that firearm deaths are more likely to occur
in small towns than in major cities. The authors analyzed 20 years of mortality
data across a range of county types — from most rural to most urban — and found
that the most rural counties had the highest rates of firearm deaths compared
to the most urban counties. The researchers also found that, regardless of
county type, firearms deaths increased markedly from 2011 to 2020 compared to
the previous decade, primarily because of an increase in gun suicides.
“We felt like it was really important to point out
that this isn’t simply a city problem,” said Charles Branas, the chair of
epidemiology at Columbia University’s School of Public Health and one of the letter’s
authors. “Gun deaths are a bigger problem in these small towns and rural
areas.”
To conduct their research, Branas and his colleagues
compared data from 2001-2010 to 2011- 2020, looking for trends in mortality
rates. They found that, compared to the period between 2001 to 2010, when the
overall firearm death rate in the most rural counties was nearly 25 percent
higher than the most urban counties, that margin had increased to nearly 40
percent between 2011 and 2020. In both time periods, rural counties experienced
a significantly higher rate of gun suicides and a lower rate of gun
homicides.
The research builds on a previous study of gun deaths between 1989 through
1999, which found the risk of dying by gunshot was nearly the same in rural and
urban areas. The researchers said they were motivated to follow up on the
earlier research, but also felt it was important to complete the new study
because of rural legislators’ unwillingness to focus on public health measures
to reduce gun violence.
Branas noted that the study did not analyze nonfatal
shootings, which might affect the overall findings.
“I do not want to minimize the risk that people face
in cities,” he said, “but I do think that what the data points out is that this
is everybody’s problem, and that we all need to get together on the issue if we
really are going to make a difference.”
The perception that urban communities are the
epicenters of America’s gun violence crisis persists even as data shows
otherwise. In 2022, the Center for American Progress (CAP) published a report that found proportionally rural communities had
higher rates of gun homicide than urban communities.
Authors of the JAMA letter and CAP report note that
misrepresentation of where gun violence takes place has legislative and
judicial implications, including politicians not adequately allocating
resources throughout the state to address gun violence throughout multiple
communities. In addition, they both mentioned that racist historical narratives
also contribute to the perpetuation of gun violence being only an issue for
urban communities, which have historically had high populations of marginalized
groups.
“I think it is important that we combat the
narrative that this is a city problem,” said Nick Wilson, a researcher at CAP
who worked on the report. “Gun violence impacts all communities, whether it’s
rural, suburban or urban, and we are all in this together and have to pass
stronger laws and invest in prevention.”
In the past decade, more Americans than ever say
they are purchasing guns for self-protection, although research shows
that the presence of a firearm increases the odds that it is used against its
owner. Studies also show that rural communities have the
highest rates of gun ownership in the country.
The JAMA letter also illustrates how, although rural
counties saw the largest increase in gun suicide rates, suicides have steadily
increased in all county types since 2001. Gun homicides were not as consistent
across all county types.
“When we say gun violence is a public health
problem, we need to be very clear about what that means,” said Branas. “Gun
suicides are not crimes, and they should not be classified or treated as such,
and that means that the law system is not involved, this is a true public
health responsibility.”
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