More American children and teens die from firearms than any other cause, but there are more deaths — and wider racial disparities — in states with more permissive gun policies, according to a new study, reported by Nada Hassanein of Stateline.
The study, published in the medical journal JAMA Pediatrics
last week, analyzes trends in state firearm policies and kids’ deaths since
2010, after the landmark U.S. Supreme Court decision in McDonald
v. City of Chicago. The ruling struck down the city’s handgun ban,
clearing the way for many states to make it easier for people to buy and carry
guns.
The study authors split states into three groups: “most
permissive,” “permissive” and “strict,” based on the stringency of their
firearm policies. Those policies include safe storage laws, background checks
and so-called Stand Your Ground laws. The researchers analyzed homicide and
suicide rates and the children’s race.
Using statistical methods, the researchers calculated 6,029
excess deaths in the most permissive states between 2011 and 2023, compared
with the number of deaths that would have been expected under the states’
pre-McDonald rules. There were 1,424 excess deaths in the states in the middle
category.
In total, about 17,000 deaths were expected in the
post-decision period, but 23,000 occurred, said lead author Dr. Jeremy Faust,
an emergency physician at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston, in an
interview.
Among the eight states with the strictest laws, four —
California, Maryland, New York and Rhode Island — saw statistically significant
decreases in their pediatric firearm death rates. Illinois, which was directly
affected by the court’s decision in the McDonald case, and Connecticut saw
increases in their rates. In Massachusetts and New Jersey, the changes were not
statistically significant.
The rate increased in all but four (Alaska, Arizona,
Nebraska and South Dakota) of the 41 states in the two permissive categories.
(Hawaii was not included in the study due its low rates of firearm deaths.)
Non-Hispanic Black children and teens saw the largest
increase in firearm deaths in the 41 states with looser gun laws. Those youths’
mortality rates increased, but by a much smaller amount, in the states with
strict laws.
Experts say the study underscores the power of policy to
help prevent firearm deaths among children and teens. The analysis comes less
than a month after the release of a federal report on children’s health that purported to
highlight the drivers of poor health in America’s children but failed to
include anything on firearm injuries — the leading cause of death for children
and teens in 2020 and 2021, according to the federal Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention.
Trauma surgeon Dr. Marie Crandall, chair of surgery at
MetroHealth medical center and a professor at Case Western Reserve University
School of Medicine in Cleveland, researches gun violence. She previously practiced at a
Jacksonville, Florida, urban trauma unit, where she frequently saw children and
teens caught in gun violence.
“When I see children come in with 10 holes in them that I
can’t save — that is a loss. That is a completely preventable death, and it is
deeply emotionally scarring to have to have those conversations with families
when we know, as a society, there are things we could do to de-escalate,” said
Crandall, who wasn’t involved in the new study.
When I see children come in with 10 holes in them that I
can't save — that is a loss. That is a completely preventable death.
– Dr. Marie Crandall, chair of surgery, MetroHealth medical
center, Cleveland
In her state of Ohio, firearm death rates among children and
teens increased from 1.6 per 100,000 kids in the decade before the McDonald
decision to 2.8 after it, according to the study. Ohio was categorized in the
group with the most permissive laws.
The study adds to previous research that shows state laws around child access to firearms, such
as safe storage and background checks, tend to be
associated with fewer child firearm deaths.
“We know that child access prevention decreases
unintentional injuries and suicides of children. So having your firearms
locked, unloaded, stored separately from ammunition, decreases the likelihood
of childhood injuries,” Crandall said. “More stringent regulation of those
things also decreases childhood injuries.”
But she said it’s hard to be optimistic about more stringent
regulation when the current administration dismisses gun violence as a public health emergency.
The Trump administration earlier this year took down an advisory from the
former U.S. surgeon general, issued last year, that emphasized gun violence as
a public health crisis.
Faust, the lead author of the new study, stressed that
firearm injuries and deaths were notably missing from the Make America Healthy
Again Commission report on children’s health. He said the failure to include
them illustrates the politicization of a major public health emergency for
America’s kids.
“It’s hard to take them seriously if they’re omitting the
leading cause of death,” Faust said. “They’re whiffing, they’re shanking. They’re
deciding on a political basis not to do it. I would say by omitting it, they’re
politicizing it.”
Faust and pediatric trauma surgeon Dr. Chethan Sathya, who
directs the Center for Gun Violence Prevention at the Northwell Health system
in New York, each pointed to the development of car seat laws and public health
education, as examples of preventive strategies that helped reduce childhood fatalities. They support
a similar approach to curbing youth gun deaths.
“We really have to apply a public health framework to this
issue, not a political one, and we’ve done that with other issues in the past,”
said Sathya, who wasn’t involved in the study and oversees his hospital’s
firearm injury prevention programs. “There’s no question that this is a public
health issue.”
In Louisiana, which the study categorized as one of the 30
most permissive states, the child firearm mortality rate increased from 4.1 per
100,000 kids in the pre-McDonald period to 5.7 after it — the nation’s highest
rate. The study period only goes to 2023, but the state last year enacted a
permitless carry law, allowing people to carry guns in public without
undergoing background checks. And just last month, Louisiana legislators defeated
a bill that would have created the crime of improper firearm storage.
Louisiana Democratic state Rep. Matthew Willard, who
sponsored the safe storage legislation, said during the floor debate that its
purpose was to protect children. Louisiana had the highest rate of unintentional shootings by children
between 2015 to 2022, according to the research arm of Everytown for Gun
Safety, which advocates for stricter gun access. Willard cited that statistic
on the floor.
But Republican opponents said Willard’s proposal would
infringe on residents’ gun rights and make it more difficult for them to use
guns in self-defense.
“Nobody needs to come in our houses and tell us what to do
with our guns. I think this is ridiculous,” Republican Rep. R. Dewith
Carrier said during the debate.
Another Republican opponent, state Rep. Troy Romero, said he
was concerned that having a firearm locked away would make it harder for an
adult to quickly access it.
“If it’s behind a locked drawer, how in the world are you
going, at 2 or 3 in the morning, going to be able to protect your family
if somebody intrudes or comes into your home?” Romero said.
Gun violence researcher Julia Fleckman, an assistant
professor, and her team at Tulane University in New Orleans have started to
collect data on the impact of the state’s permitless carry law.
“It places a disproportionate impact on really vulnerable
people, really, our most vulnerable people,” Fleckman said, noting kids bear
the brunt of legislators’ decisions. “They don’t have a lot of control over
this or the decisions we’re making.”
In South Carolina, another one of the most permissive
states, the mortality rate increased from 2.3 to 3.9 per 100,000 kids in the
time before and after the McDonald decision. South Carolina Democratic state
Rep. JA Moore, who lost his adult sister 10 years ago today in the 2015
racist shooting that killed nine at a Charleston church, said
state policy alone isn’t enough. He implored his colleagues to also examine
their perception of guns.
“We have a culture here in South Carolina that doesn’t lend
itself to a more safe South Carolina,” said Moore, who added he’s been
advocating for background checks and stricter carry laws. “There is a need for
a culture change in our state, in our country, when it comes to guns and our
relationships with guns as Americans, realizing that these are deadly weapons.”
And investing in safer neighborhoods is crucial, he said.
“People are hurt by guns in places that they’re more comfortable,
like their homes in their own neighborhoods,” he said.
Community-based interventions are important to stemming
violence, experts said. Crandall, the Cleveland surgeon, said there’s emerging
evidence that hospital-based and community-based violence prevention programs
decrease the likelihood of violent and firearm-related injury.
Such programs aim to break cycles of violence by connecting
injured patients with community engagement services. After New York City
implemented its hospital-based violence interruption program, two-thirds of 3,500 violent trauma patients treated at
five hospitals received community prevention services.
After her 33-year-old son was killed in her neighborhood in
2019, Michelle Bell started M-PAC Cleveland — “More Prayer, Activity &
Conversation” — a nonprofit collaborative of people who’ve lost loved ones to
violent crime. She’s encountered many grieving parents who lost their children
to gunfire. The group advocates and educates for safe storage laws and holds
peer grief support groups.
She also partners with the school district in a program that
shares stories of gun violence’s long-lasting impact on surviving children,
families and communities and non-violent interpersonal conflict resolution.
“Oftentimes, the family that has lost the child, the child’s
life has been taken by gun violence, there are other children in the home,” she
said.
“It’s so devastating. It’s just so tragic that the No. 1
cause of death for children 18 and under is gun violence,” Bell continued.
The decision to “pull a trigger,” she said, changes a
“lifetime of not only yours, but so many other people.”
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