Number of US children killed by guns hit record high in 2021 - study
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[August 23, 2023]
By Rachel Nostrant
(Reuters) - Child gun deaths in the United States have hit a record
high, according to a new study published by the American Academy of
Pediatrics.
Using the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention's mortality
database, the study published on Monday in the AAP's journal Pediatrics
found that 4,752 children died from gun-related injuries in 2021, the
latest year for which data was available, up from 4,368 in 2020 and
3,390 in 2019. |
Students of Oxford High School and other
schools in the area, along with community members, gather for a
candlelight prayer vigil at Bridgewood Church to pray for the community,
a day after a deadly shooting at Oxford High School in Oxford, Michigan,
in Clarkston, Michigan, U.S., December 1, 2021. REUTERS/Seth Herald/File
Photo |
Gun
violence has been the number one cause of death for children in
the United States since 2020.
The study was published as Tennessee lawmakers opened a special
session on public safety after a Nashville school shooting
earlier this year that killed three children and three teachers.
Annie Andrews, a South Carolina pediatrician and gun violence
prevention researcher who was not involved in the study, said
that when she became a doctor, "I never imagined I would take
care of so many children with bullet holes in them.
"But the fact of the matter is, in every children's hospital
across this country, there are children in the pediatric
intensive care units suffering from firearm injuries."
The study further showed that Black children accounted for
around 67% of firearm homicides while white children made up
about 78% of gun-assisted suicides.
Iman Omer, a junior at Vanderbilt University in Nashville and an
anti-gun violence advocate with Students Demand Action, said the
study's findings were devastating but unsurprising.
"Every year, I know that 128 children and teens in Tennessee die
by guns," Omer said as she headed to the state's capitol Tuesday
to join protesters who have been demanding tougher gun laws.
Tennessee Governor Bill Lee, who knew two of the teachers killed
in the Nashville shooting, had asked lawmakers in the special
session to bolster so called red flag laws aimed at keeping
firearms out of the hands of people deemed to be a threat. He
has faced resistance from his fellow Republicans, who control
the statehouse.
In a statement Tuesday, the Tennessee Firearms Association
expressed concern that "while some Republican legislators have
said that no Red Flag laws will pass, far fewer have stated that
no laws that would have any negative impact on 2nd Amendment
protected rights would pass."
(Reporting by Rachel Nostrant; Editing by Donna Bryson; and
Alistair Bell)
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