U.S. teens have same firearm access
regardless of suicide risk
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[January 03, 2015]
By Andrew M. Seaman
(Reuters Health) - U.S. teens report easy access to firearms, even when
they have mental health problems that put them at an increased risk of
suicide, according to a new study.
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Overall, 41 percent of teens who reported being in a home with a
firearm had easy access to it. Among teens with a history of mental
illness or suicidal acts, researchers found that percentage was the
same.
The American Psychological Association and the American Academy of
Pediatrics advise healthcare providers to talk about firearm safe
storage with parents – especially those with at-risk youths at home.
“Our goal of this study was to find out if those recommendations
were being implemented effectively in the community,” said Dr.
Joseph Simonetti, the study’s lead author from the University of
Washington School of Medicine’s Harborview Medical Center in
Seattle.
Simonetti and his colleagues write in JAMA Psychiatry that suicide
is the second leading cause of death for U.S. teens. Having a
firearm in the home is one risk factor for suicide, they add.
Previous studies have found a lower suicide risk among residents of
homes that practice safe storage of firearms.
For the new study, the authors used data collected between 2001 and
2004 from 10,123 U.S. teens between ages 13 and 18 years.
A third of the teens reported living in a home with a firearm. Of
those, about 41 percent said they had easy access to that firearm
and the ability to shoot it.
Older, male and non-Hispanic teens were more likely to report being
able to access firearms. Those living in rural or wealthy households
were also more likely to report access.
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Among the teens with histories of mental illness or suicidal
actions, such as thoughts or attempts, the researchers found they
were just as likely as those without such histories to report
firearm access.
“There is a disconnect between these generally agreed upon storage
methods and what’s happening in the community,” Simonetti said.
He cautioned that the data included in this study is old. “One of
the limitations of this study is we’re using data that was collected
from 2001 to 2004,” Simonetti said, adding that he and his
colleagues can’t say how practices may have changed since then.
“We need better studies on how to promote safe firearms storage
especially in households with children and children with mental
illness,” he said.
Simonetti said some effective safe storage methods include using gun
locks and gun cabinets and hiding the keys from children.
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1xftWKo JAMA Psychiatry, December 30, 2014.
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