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首页> 外文期刊>American journal of public health >State Firearm Laws, Firearm Ownership, and Safety Practices Among Families of Preschool-Aged Children
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State Firearm Laws, Firearm Ownership, and Safety Practices Among Families of Preschool-Aged Children

机译:学龄前儿童家庭中的国家枪支法律,枪支所有权和安全规范

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摘要

Objectives. We investigated how state-level firearms legislation is associated with firearm ownership and storage among families with preschool-aged children. Methods. Using 2005 nationally representative data from the Early Childhood Longitudinal Study-Birth Cohort (n?=?8100), we conducted multinomial regression models to examine the associations between state-level firearms legislation generally, child access prevention (CAP) firearms legislation specifically, and parental firearm ownership and storage safety practices. Results. Overall, 8% of families with children aged 4 years living in states with stronger firearm laws and CAP laws owned firearms compared with 24% of families in states with weaker firearm laws and no CAP laws. Storage behaviors of firearm owners differed minimally across legislative contexts. When we controlled for family- and state-level characteristics, we found that firearm legislation and CAP laws interacted to predict ownership and storage behaviors, with unsafe storage least likely among families in states with both CAP laws and stronger firearm legislation. Conclusions. Broader firearm legislation is linked with the efficacy of child-specific legislation in promoting responsible firearm ownership. Family firearm safety practices are a major public health concern, with firearm-related deaths being one of the leading causes of injury-related fatalities among young children. 1 Recent media attention on accidental shootings involving young children has heightened public and policy debate over the role of government in restricting access to firearms and the effectiveness of firearm laws. 2,3 Some states have implemented laws—often referred to generally as child access prevention (CAP) laws—that legislate safe firearm storage practices among families with children and make adults criminally liable for children’s unsupervised use of firearms. Studies examining the effects of CAP laws, however, report mixed findings, suggesting that they have a greater effect on child morbidity and mortality when instituted in states with higher levels of pediatric firearm incidents and when the penalties associated with firearm usage are more stringent. 4–8 One explanation for the lack of consistent findings is that most studies have not directly measured the behavior CAP laws intend to regulate. That is, little is known about how these access laws are associated with factors beyond mortality and morbidity, such as firearm storage behaviors. We addressed this gap by empirically testing the relationship between CAP laws and firearm storage behaviors in a nationally representative sample. Currently, limitations of this literature constrain the ability to draw strong conclusions about the effects of state-level policies on firearm ownership and storage practices. 4,9 For example, because person-level data on firearm-related behavior is scarce, many studies that rely on macrolevel statistics (e.g., state firearm ownership, firearm-related mortality) run the risk of creating ecological fallacies, whereby associations at the aggregate level are erroneously extrapolated to the individual level. 10 Similarly, aggregate-level data do not allow the examination of the specific populations that the policies address and, hence, may not be sufficiently sensitive to directly test these policies’ effects. A lack of data that can be used to compare ownership and specific aspects of that ownership, such as safety practices, also makes it difficult to determine if stronger laws generally affect firearm ownership or laws directed at specific unsafe behaviors work. Furthermore, the potential for state policies to be a product of the selectivity of the residents of the state complicates disentangling the effects of state-level firearm laws. 11 Lawmakers in states with a high proportion of firearm owners may be more reluctant to pass laws that regulate firearm practices; consequently, observed correlations between laws and state-level firearm ownership may reflect state population characteristics or state “gun culture” to a greater extent than states’ firearm policy (or lack thereof). In line with the American Academy of Pediatrics’ recommendation that parents who own firearms store them locked and unloaded, with ammunition locked and stored separately, 12 we examined how laws aimed at firearm storage practices—along with general state-level firearm laws—are associated with firearm ownership and storage behaviors among families with preschool-aged children. Previous research has suggested a theoretical framework emphasizing the importance of both situational and individual characteristics in understanding patterns of firearm ownership. 13 For example, studies link higher socioeconomic status, being White, and having a man in the house with higher levels of firearm ownership. 14,15 We anticipated that (1) families in states with stronger general and child-specific firearm legislation would have the lowest rates of firearm ow
机译:目标。我们调查了州级枪支立法与学龄前儿童家庭之间枪支所有权和储存的关系。方法。我们使用来自早期儿童纵向研究-出生队列(n = 8100)的2005年全国代表性数据,进行了多项回归模型,研究了州一级枪支立法,特别是防止儿童进入(CAP)枪支立法之间的联系,以及父母对枪支的所有权和储存安全规范。结果。总体而言,居住在枪支法律和CAP法律更强的州中,有4岁儿童的家庭中有8%拥有枪支,而枪支法律较弱且没有CAP法律的州中有24%的家庭拥有枪支。枪支拥有者的存储行为在各个立法背景下差异最小。当我们控制家庭和州一级的特征时,我们发现枪支立法和CAP法相互影响以预测所有权和存储行为,在同时具有CAP法和更强大的枪支法规的州的家庭中,不安全存储的可能性最小。结论。更广泛的枪支立法与针对儿童的立法在促进负责任的枪支所有权方面的功效联系在一起。家庭枪支安全做法是一个主要的公共卫生问题,与枪支有关的死亡是幼儿受伤致死的主要原因之一。 1最近媒体对涉及幼儿的枪击事件的关注加剧了关于政府在限制枪支获取和枪支法律效力方面的作用的公众和政策辩论。 [2,3]一些州已实施法律(通常通常称为“防止儿童进入法”(CAP)),该法律规定了有孩子的家庭之间安全的枪支存放做法,并使成年人对儿童的无监督使用枪支负有刑事责任。然而,研究CAP法的效果的研究却得出了不同的结论,表明当在儿科枪支事件水平较高的州或对枪支使用的处罚更加严格时,对儿童发病率和死亡率的影响更大。 4-8对于缺乏一致的发现的一种解释是,大多数研究没有直接测量CAP法律打算规范的行为。也就是说,人们对这些准入法与死亡和发病率之外的其他因素(例如枪支储存行为)如何相关还知之甚少。我们通过在全国有代表性的样本中通过经验测试CAP法与枪支存放行为之间的关系来解决这一差距。当前,该文献的局限性限制了就州一级政策对枪支所有权和储存做法的影响得出强有力结论的能力。 4,9例如,由于缺乏有关枪支相关行为的个人数据,许多依赖宏观统计数据的研究(例如,国家枪支所有权,与枪支相关的死亡率)冒着造成生态谬误的风险,因此聚合级别错误地外推到个人级别。 10同样,汇总级别的数据也不允许检查政策所针对的特定人群,因此可能不够敏感,无法直接测试这些政策的效果。缺乏可用于比较所有权和所有权的特定方面(例如安全实践)的数据,这也使得很难确定更强大的法律是否普遍影响枪支所有权或针对特定不安全行为的法律。此外,国家政策成为国家居民选择性的产物的潜力使弄清国家级枪支法律的影响变得复杂。 11在枪支拥有者比例很高的州,立法者可能更不愿通过规范枪支行为的法律。因此,观察到的法律与州一级枪支所有权之间的相关性可能比州的枪支政策(或缺乏枪支政策)在更大程度上反映了州人口特征或州“枪支文化”。根据美国儿科学会的建议,拥有枪支的父母应将枪支锁好后再装卸,将弹药锁住并分开存放,12我们研究了针对枪支保管做法的法律以及一般的州级枪支法律是如何关联的有学龄前儿童的家庭中枪支拥有和储存行为。先前的研究提出了一个理论框架,该框架强调了情境和个人特征在理解枪支所有权模式方面的重要性。 13例如,研究将较高的社会经济地位与白人联系起来,并让一个人拥有较高的枪支所有权。 14,15我们预计(1)在拥有更强的一般性和针对儿童的枪支法规的州,家庭枪支犯罪率最低

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