Study reveals the widespread and persistent role of
firearms
The No. 2 cause of
death hasn't changed much in 17 years, while prevention efforts cut the death
rate from No. 1 cause -- motor vehicle accidents -- in half
Michigan Medicine -
University of Michigan
America lost 20,360
children and teens in 2016 -- 60 percent of them to preventable injuries, a new
study shows.
More than 4,000 of them died in motor vehicle crashes, though prevention efforts and better trauma care have cut the death rate of young people from such crashes in half in less than two decades.
More than 4,000 of them died in motor vehicle crashes, though prevention efforts and better trauma care have cut the death rate of young people from such crashes in half in less than two decades.
Meanwhile, firearms --
the number two cause of death in youth -- claimed the lives of more than 3,140
children and teens in 2016, according to the new findings from a University of
Michigan team
That's about eight
children a day, according to their special report in the New England
Journal of Medicine.
Unlike vehicle crashes, the rate of firearm-related death for those aged 1 to 19 years has stayed around the same for nearly the past two decades, the new analysis shows. That rate is more than 36 times as high as the average rate across 12 other high-income countries.
The new study, by
members of the U-M Injury Prevention Center, was done using publicly available
data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's WONDER database
of information from death certificates.
It's the first time
all causes of child and adolescent death have been tallied by both mechanism
and intent, and that rates of these causes of death over time have been
calculated for all the top causes.
Cancer, which accounted for 1,853 deaths of those age 1 to 19, comes in third place, and its death rate has dropped since the start of the study period. Suffocation -- mainly suicides by hanging and other means -- was fourth, and is on the rise.
Those causes are
followed by drowning, drug overdoses/poisonings and birth defects, each with
just under 1,000 deaths and steady decreases in death rates over the last 17
years for both drowning and birth defects.
Lead author Rebecca
Cunningham, M.D., director of the U-M center and an emergency medicine
physician at Michigan Medicine, U-M's academic medical center, notes that
firearm-related deaths occur at about the same rate in urban, rural and
suburban settings.
"Firearm deaths
of children and adolescents are an 'everybody' problem, not a problem for just
certain population," says Cunningham, a professor in the U-M Department of
Emergency Medicine. "Homicides account for 60 percent of those deaths,
suicide about 35 percent, unintentional or accidental injuries about one
percent and mass shootings slightly less than one percent."
She adds, "By
using a data-driven approach to studying these deaths, I hope we can guide the
U.S. to apply our resources to help us understand what we can do to prevent
these deaths across the country."
More about firearm
deaths
Ever since 1999, the
researchers show, about 4 of every 100,000 American children and adolescents
have died by a gun-related homicide, suicide or unintended shooting each year.
Firearm deaths affect
all areas of America, the study shows. Urban adolescents are twice as likely to
die in homicides as rural youth, while rural teens have a rate of suicides
that's twice as high as the rate for urban youth.
Suburban teens who die of firearm-related causes do so of suicide and homicide at roughly equal rates.
Suburban teens who die of firearm-related causes do so of suicide and homicide at roughly equal rates.
For children between
the ages of 1 and 9 years, unintentional injuries were the leading cause of
firearm death.
Boys had firearm death
rates five times that of girls, and African-American young people had a firearm
death rate nearly three times that of white children and teens.
Other causes, and a
call for action
Co-author Maureen
Walton, MPH, Ph.D., associate director of the Injury Prevention Center and
professor in the U-M Department of Psychiatry, notes that drug poisoning and
overdose have risen to be the sixth leading cause of death for young people.
This is largely due to
increases in opioid overdoses, which the study shows account for over half of
drug overdoses among adolescents, says Walton, who is the associate director of
child research at the U-M Addiction Center.
Motor vehicle crashes
kill nearly three times as many children and teens per 100,000 in rural areas,
compared with in urban and near-urban areas -- even when the researchers
adjusted the data to account for the extra miles traveled each year by drivers
in rural areas.
"Our country has
spent billions to decrease car crash injuries and deaths for kids and adults,
and has made it a leading priority for several federal agencies. Safety in a
crash is now a selling point for cars," says Cunningham.
This implementation of 'prevention science' has resulted in the steady decrease in motor vehicle crash deaths for children and teens over the past 20 years.
This implementation of 'prevention science' has resulted in the steady decrease in motor vehicle crash deaths for children and teens over the past 20 years.
"At the same
time, we have dozens of teams of scientists and clinicians working on
prevention and treatment of pediatric cancers, congenital conditions and heart
diseases," conditions where death rates have also fallen," she adds.
"We hope these data help put firearm deaths of young people in the proper context, so we can study and test potential preventive measures while respecting the Second Amendment rights of gun owners."
"We hope these data help put firearm deaths of young people in the proper context, so we can study and test potential preventive measures while respecting the Second Amendment rights of gun owners."
Some of the efforts to
reduce firearm deaths among children and teens could be led by physicians, she
adds.
She recalls learning about the early warning signs and diagnostic steps for childhood cancers such as leukemia, and for other serious childhood ailments, during her residency training.
But today's medical students and residents get little or no training about how to ask parents if guns are present, and stored safely and securely, in their homes.
She recalls learning about the early warning signs and diagnostic steps for childhood cancers such as leukemia, and for other serious childhood ailments, during her residency training.
But today's medical students and residents get little or no training about how to ask parents if guns are present, and stored safely and securely, in their homes.
U-M firearm injury
prevention researcher and emergency physician Patrick Carter, M.D., assistant
director of the Injury Prevention Center, co-authored the study.
"Firearm risk to
children and adolescents, whether from unintentional or intentional use of a
gun, is a serious medical issue that all of us in the profession can help
address," he says.
"The results from this study certainly have inspired me as a physician to know that we need to be doing better. We hope that these findings will also encourage other physicians to know that this is indeed their 'lane' to be working in, to be preventing firearm related injury and death."
"The results from this study certainly have inspired me as a physician to know that we need to be doing better. We hope that these findings will also encourage other physicians to know that this is indeed their 'lane' to be working in, to be preventing firearm related injury and death."