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Between
2007 and 2010, there were 121 084 firearm fatalities in the United
States, including 73 702 firearm suicides and 47 382 firearm homicides.
The overall firearm fatality rate was 9.9/100 000 individuals per year. The
average state-based firearm fatality rates varied from a high of 17.9
(Louisiana) to a low of 2.9 (Hawaii) per 100 000 individuals per year. That’s according to a new study in JAMA Internal Medicine.
States with so-called “Stand Your Ground” gun laws see about 30 percent
more child firearm injuries compared to states without such laws,
according to recent research. Males were 36 times more likely to be hospitalized for a firearm injury
than females, while black youths were four times more likely. Hispanic
youth, people living in urban areas and teens over the age of 16 were
also at heightened risk.
Credit: JAMA
In 2010, firearms killed 68% of the 16 259 victims of homicide. In the same year, there were 38 364 suicides, of which 51% were by firearms.1 Beyond the loss of life and nonfatal traumatic injuries, the financial cost of firearm injuries is enormous. In 2005, the medical costs associated with fatal and nonfatal firearm injuries were estimated at $112 million and $599 million, respectively, and work loss costs were estimated at $40.5 billion.1
Mass killings such as those in Columbine and Aurora in Colorado, the Wisconsin Sikh temple shooting, and most recently the Newtown, Connecticut, school massacre have renewed debate about the need for more stringent firearm legislation. Some have called for more restrictions on gun purchases.3 Others have called for arming teachers.4 It is challenging to calculate the exact number of firearm laws: a single law may have multiple parts; laws are potentially passed at the national, state, county, and city level; and there is no repository available for tallying these laws.5 The factoid that there are “20 000 laws governing firearms”5 has been erroneously quoted since 1965, but the most recent and reliable estimate, performed in 1999, counted about 300 state firearm laws.6
The real question is not about the number of firearm laws but whether the laws ultimately safeguard the citizens they are intended to protect. Although multiple studies have examined the relationship between federal and state firearm laws and homicide and suicide rates, the overall association between firearm legislation and firearm mortality is uncertain and remains controversial. For
the specific legislative categories, only background checks had a
significant relationship across all outcomes, with stronger background
checks associated with lower overall firearm fatality rates.
See the complete study here.
2013-03-06 20:45:34
Source: http://nanopatentsandinnovations.blogspot.com/2013/03/annually-30000-us-deaths-from-firearms.html