101,977 results on '"FIREARMS"'
Search Results
2. Prevalence of Gun Carrying and Gun Violence Victimization and Perpetration Among a Nationally Representative Sample of U.S. Youth and Young Adults
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Taylor, Bruce G., Mitchell, Kimberly J., Turner, Heather A., Sheridan-Johnson, Jackie, and Mumford, Elizabeth A.
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- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Geographical isolation, mental health, economic stress and firearm suicide in Harris County, Texas
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Levine, Ned, Naik-Mathuria, Bindi, Cain, Cary, Oluyomi, Abiodun, Carter, Jeff, Martinez, Aaron, and Pompeii, Lisa
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- 2025
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4. Predicting early complications in patients with spinal gunshot wounds: A multicenter study
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Ricciardi, Guillermo A., Cabrera, Juan P., Martínez, Oscar, Matta, Javier, Vilchis, Hugo, Perez Ríos, Jeasson Javier, Carazzo, Charles A., Dittmar, Michael, and Yurac, Ratko
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- 2024
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5. Epidemiology of mass stabbings in Australia and worldwide: The need for enhanced counter-violence medicine
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Haghani, Milad
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- 2024
6. Material hardship and secure firearm storage: findings from the 2022 behavioral risk factor Surveillance System.
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Testa, Alexander, Henson-Garcia, Mike, Jackson, Dylan, Fu, Karyn, Ganson, Kyle, and Nagata, Jason
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BRFSS ,Firearm Secure Storage ,Firearms ,Material hardship ,Poverty ,Public Health - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Firearm secure storage is an important public health practice due to its potential impact on reducing the incidence of accidental injuries, suicides, and thefts. Yet, there is limited research on how economic conditions might shape firearm storage patterns. METHODS: This study explores the relationship between material hardship and firearm secure storage among firearm-owning households. Data from the 2022 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System (BRFSS) were analyzed, including responses from 7,197 firearm-owning adults in California, Minnesota, Nevada, and New Mexico. Multinomial logistic regression models assessed the relationship between levels of material hardship and storage practices, adjusting for demographic and socioeconomic factors. RESULTS: Among respondents, 14.3% reported firearms were stored, loaded and unlocked. Compared to respondents experiencing no hardships, those experiencing three or more material hardships incurred a 183% higher risk of storing firearms in an unsecured manner (Relative Risk Ratio = 2.828, 95% CI = 1.286, 6.220). CONCLUSION: This study highlights an association between greater material hardship and unsecured firearm storage. These findings emphasize the need for public health interventions that address economic barriers to safe firearm storage, potentially reducing firearm-related injuries and deaths among individuals experiencing material hardship.
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- 2024
7. Racial capitalism and firearm violence: Developing a theoretical framework for firearm violence research examining structural racism.
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Uzzi, Mudia, Whittaker, Shannon, Esposito, Michael, Dean, Lorraine, Buggs, Shani, and Pollack Porter, Keshia
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Humans ,Black or African American ,Capitalism ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Firearms ,Gun Violence ,Residence Characteristics ,Systemic Racism ,Violence - Abstract
Despite the early promise of centering structural racism in explanatory models of firearm violence, there are noticeable gaps in whats been produced thus far; in particular, a deeper and more serious engagement with long-standing theories of racism is needed to further enrich our understanding of how structural inequalities produce unequal burdens of firearm-related harms. Thus, building on theories and concepts from a range of academic fields and Black philosophical perspectives, we developed a theoretical framework to help explain the role of place-based structural racism on firearm violence disparities. A central component of our framework is the concept racial capitalism, which contends that racial exploitation and the accumulation of assets depend on and reinforce one another. In this article, we present our framework and highlight how two processes related to racial capitalism-racialized dispossession and racialized spatial stigma-are connected with geographic disparities in firearm violence. We also present the results of an ecological cross-sectional study that reveals a potential key association between racial capitalism and firearm violence disparities on the neighborhood-level. We used a structural intersectionality approach and descriptive epidemiological methods to highlight and quantitatively describe spatial firearm violence disparities that could potentially be linked to the varying exposure of two dimensions of racial capitalism-historical redlining and contemporary racialized subprime mortgage lending. We found that sustained disadvantaged census tracts (tracts that were historically redlined and experienced higher contemporary subprime lending) experienced the highest burden of firearm violence in Baltimore City between 2015 and 2019. Our research suggests that racial capitalism could potentially be a root cause of firearm violence disparities. A theoretical framework based on racial capitalism can inform the development and usage of indicators and analytic methods for racism-related firearm violence research. Moreover, this framework can identify factors to prioritize in equity-based violence prevention policies and programs.
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- 2024
8. Predicting Short Time-to-Crime Guns: a Machine Learning Analysis of California Transaction Records (2010-2021).
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Laqueur, Hannah, Smirniotis, Colette, and McCort, Christopher
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Crime guns ,Firearm transactions ,Random forest ,Risk prediction ,Short time-to-crime ,Variable importance ,Humans ,Firearms ,California ,Machine Learning ,Crime ,Commerce - Abstract
Gun-related crime continues to be an urgent public health and safety problem in cities across the US. A key question is: how are firearms diverted from the legal retail market into the hands of gun offenders? With close to 8 million legal firearm transaction records in California (2010-2020) linked to over 380,000 records of recovered crime guns (2010-2021), we employ supervised machine learning to predict which firearms are used in crimes shortly after purchase. Specifically, using random forest (RF) with stratified under-sampling, we predict any crime gun recovery within a year (0.2% of transactions) and violent crime gun recovery within a year (0.03% of transactions). We also identify the purchaser, firearm, and dealer characteristics most predictive of this short time-to-crime gun recovery using SHapley Additive exPlanations and mean decrease in accuracy variable importance measures. Overall, our models show good discrimination, and we are able to identify firearms at extreme risk for diversion into criminal hands. The test set AUC is 0.85 for both models. For the model predicting any recovery, a default threshold of 0.50 results in a sensitivity of 0.63 and a specificity of 0.88. Among transactions identified as extremely risky, e.g., transactions with a score of 0.98 and above, 74% (35/47 in the test data) are recovered within a year. The most important predictive features include purchaser age and caliber size. This study suggests the potential utility of transaction records combined with machine learning to identify firearms at the highest risk for diversion and criminal use soon after purchase.
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- 2024
9. Alcohol, Tobacco, and Firearm Promotion in Digital Media: Corporate Influences on Adolescent Health
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Emond, Jennifer A., Chester, Jeffrey, Noel, Jonathan, Allem, Jon-Patrick, Bushman, Brad J., Primack, Brian, Sargent, James D., Christakis, Dimitri A., editor, and Hale, Lauren, editor
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- 2025
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10. Expectations of and perceived need for civil war in the USA: findings from a 2023 nationally representative survey.
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Wintemute, Garen, Li, Yueju, Velasquez, Bradley, Crawford, Andrew, Reeping, Paul, and Tomsich, Elizabeth
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Boogaloo movement ,Christian nationalism ,Civil war ,Domestic violent extremism ,Firearm violence ,Firearms ,Militia movement ,Oath keepers ,Political violence ,Proud boys ,QAnon ,Racism ,Three percenters ,Violence and society ,White supremacy - Abstract
BACKGROUND: Surveys have found concerningly high levels of agreement that the United States will experience civil war soon. This study assesses variation in expectation of and perceived need for civil war with respondent sociopolitical characteristics, beliefs, firearm ownership, and willingness to engage in political violence. METHODS: Findings are from Wave 2 of a nationally representative annual longitudinal survey of members of the Ipsos KnowledgePanel, conducted May 18-June 8, 2023. All respondents to 2022s Wave 1 who remained in KnowledgePanel were invited to participate. Outcomes are expressed as weighted proportions and adjusted prevalence differences, with p-values adjusted for the false discovery rate and reported as q-values. RESULTS: The completion rate was 84.2%; there were 9385 respondents. After weighting, half the sample was female (50.7%, 95% CI 49.4%, 52.1%); the weighted mean (± standard deviation) age was 48.5 (25.9) years. Approximately 1 respondent in 20 (5.7%, 95% CI 5.1%, 6.4%) agreed strongly or very strongly that in the next few years, there will be civil war in the United States. About 1 in 25 (3.8%, 95% CI 3.2%, 4.4%), and nearly 40% (38.4%, 95% CI 32.3%, 44.5%) of those who strongly or very strongly agreed that civil war was coming, also agreed strongly or very strongly that the United States needs a civil war to set things right. Expectation of and perceived need for civil war were higher among subsets of respondents who in Wave 1 were more willing than others to commit political violence, including MAGA Republicans, persons in strong agreement with racist beliefs or statements of the potential need for violence to effect social change, persons who strongly approved of specified extreme right-wing political organizations and movements, firearm owners who purchased firearms in 2020 or later, and firearm owners who carried firearms in public all or nearly all the time. CONCLUSIONS: In 2023, the expectation that civil war was likely and the belief that it was needed were uncommon but were higher among subsets of the population that had previously been associated with greater willingness to commit political violence. These findings can help guide prevention efforts.
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- 2024
11. COVID-19: A national rise in penetrating trauma cared for by a prepared trauma system.
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Jebbia, Mallory, Nahmias, Jeffry, Dolich, Matthew, Schubl, Sebastian, Lekawa, Michael, Swentek, Lourdes, and Grigorian, Areg
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COVID ,Firearms ,Mortality ,Penetrating trauma ,Preparedness - Abstract
BACKGROUND: The COVID-19 pandemic negatively impacted the collective American psyche. Socioeconomic hardships including social isolation led to an increase in firearm sales. Previous regional studies demonstrated increased penetrating trauma during the pandemic but it is unclear if trauma systems were prepared for this influx of penetrating injuries. This study aimed to confirm this increased penetrating trauma trend nationally and hypothesized penetrating trauma patients treated during the pandemic had a higher risk of complications and death, compared to pre-pandemic patients. METHODS: The 2017-2020 Trauma Quality Improvement Program database was divided into pre-pandemic (2017-2019) and pandemic years (2020). Bivariate analyses and a multivariable logistic regression analyses were performed controlling for age, comorbidities, injuries, and vitals on arrival. RESULTS: From 3,525,132 patients, 936,890 (26.6 %) presented during the pandemic. The pandemic patients had a higher rate of stab-wounds (4.8 % vs. 4.5 %, p > 0.001) and gunshot wounds (5.8 % vs. 4.6 %, p
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- 2024
12. Risk and Protective Factors for Firearm Assault Injuries Among Black Men: A Scoping Review of Research.
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Marineau, Lea, Uzzi, Mudia, Buggs, Shani, Ihenacho, Ngozi, and Campbell, Jacquelyn
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alcohol and drugs ,community violence ,homicide ,violence ,violence exposure ,Humans ,Male ,Black or African American ,Risk Factors ,Wounds ,Gunshot ,Protective Factors ,Firearms ,United States ,Violence ,Homicide - Abstract
Black men are disproportionately affected by firearm assaults in the United States, and these disparities are rooted in structural and social inequities. The objective of this scoping review of research was to identify risk and protective factors for firearm assault injuries among Black men at all levels of the social-ecological framework. The search was conducted in 2021. The initial search generated 1,122 articles. Studies were eligible if they (a) included an analysis of modifiable risk or protective factors for firearm assaults among Black men; (b) reported an estimate of correlation, association, or effect between risk or protective factors and firearm assault injuries, firearm violence, and/or firearm homicides; and (c) were published peer-reviewed articles. In all, 19 articles were identified for review. Risk factors identified at each ecological level include the following: (1) Individual: firearm possession/weapon use and criminal legal system interaction; (2) Relationships: gang membership and exposure to other people who have experienced a firearm assault; (3) Community: indicators for socioeconomic status and racial residential segregation; and (4) Societal: historical racist policy. Individual-level substance use had mixed results. Few (26%) studies examined protective factors at any ecological level, but community-level factors like neighborhood tree cover were identified. Future research needs to examine risk and protective factors at the societal level and multiple ecological levels simultaneously leading to more effective multi-level interventions that will guide policy formation. A greater diversity of study designs, research methods, and theoretical frameworks is needed to better understand factors associated with firearm assault among Black men.
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- 2024
13. Cohort Study of Downgraded Misdemeanor Convictions and Subsequent Violent Crime: Differences by Defendant Race and Ethnicity.
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Schleimer, Julia, Haviland, Miriam, Gallagher, Amy, Mustafa, Ayah, Ross, Rachel, Wintemute, Garen, Bowen, Deirdre, and Rowhani-Rahbar, Ali
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Racial disparities ,criminal justice ,firearms ,violent crime - Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Criminal convictions may be imperfect markers of criminalized behavior, in part because of criminal legal system processes (e.g., plea bargaining). In this retrospective cohort study of individuals convicted of misdemeanors, authors compared the risk of subsequent criminal charges for a violent crime among those initially charged with a felony with that among those initially charged with only misdemeanors, overall and by defendant race and ethnicity. METHODS: The study population included individuals aged ≥18 years who were convicted of a misdemeanor in Washington Superior Courts from January 1, 2015 to December 31, 2019. Those with and without initial felony charges were age/gender matched in a 4:1 ratio. The primary outcome was the first subsequent violent crime charge in Washington Superior Courts through December 31, 2020. Data were analyzed with Fine-Gray hazard models from June 2022 to November 2023. RESULTS: There were 3,841 individuals with initial felony charges and 956 with initial misdemeanor charges only. Median follow-up was 2.4 years for both groups. During follow-up, there were 166 new violent crime charges. In multivariable models, White defendants with initial felony charges had a greater risk of subsequent violent crime charges (subdistribution hazard ratio=2.58; 95% CI=1.24, 5.36) than White defendants with initial misdemeanor charges only. Among Black and Hispanic/Latinx defendants, initial felony versus misdemeanor charges were not associated with subsequent violent crime charges (subdistribution hazard ratio=0.93; 95% CI=0.44, 1.97 among Black defendants; subdistribution hazard ratio=0.49; 95% CI=0.15, 1.57 among Hispanic/Latinx defendants). CONCLUSIONS: Findings suggest differential associations between downgrading of felony charges to misdemeanor convictions and future violent crime charges by defendant race and ethnicity, with implications for inequitable collateral consequences of criminal convictions.
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- 2024
14. THE NEXT ECHELON: THE SPRINGFIELD ARMORY ECHELON 4.0C 9MM IS AN EFFORT TO PERFECT EVERYDAY CARRY
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Wood, Keith
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Firearms ,Armories ,Polymers ,Business ,Sports, sporting goods and toys industry - Abstract
FOUR DECADES AGO, a pistol from Austria took the U.S. market by storm and forever changed the defensive handgun landscape. Since then, the market has evolved to optimize the striker-fired, [...]
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- 2025
15. CALI CARRY
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Firearms ,Firearms industry ,Business ,Sports, sporting goods and toys industry - Abstract
ANYONE THAT HAS BEEN IN A GUNFIGHT will agree, you can't have too much ammo. When SIG Sauer introduced the P365 in Guns & Ammo's May 2018 issue, it invigorated [...]
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- 2025
16. AMERICAN ALLIANCE
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Tarr, James
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Firearms ,Business ,Sports, sporting goods and toys industry - Abstract
RUGER AND MAGPUL COLLABORATE TO CHALLENGE THE G19-CLONE MARKET. HERE IS THE RUGER RXM 9MM. WHEN IT COMES TO WRITING ARTICLES, there are certain rules one is supposed to follow. [...]
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- 2025
17. .21 SHARP: WINCHESTER'S SMALLBORE CARTRIDGE WAS PURPOSE-BUILT FOR BULLSEYES AND HUNTING
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Beckstrand, Tom
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Firearms ,Hunting ,Business ,Sports, sporting goods and toys industry - Abstract
IF A GUY WANTED to get serious about hunting with a rimfire cartridge, the .21 Sharp is the way to do it. Winchester's creation was announced in 2024, and much [...]
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- 2025
18. BODYGUARD REDUX: SMITH & WESSON'S MICRO .380 GETS A MAJOR MAKE-OVER, AND THE RESULT IS A MUCH BETTER CARRY GUN
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Rupp, J. Scott
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Smith & Wesson Corp. ,Firearms ,Sporting goods stores ,Firearms industry ,Sports, sporting goods and toys industry - Abstract
Not long after I received a sample of the Smith & Wesson Bodyguard 2.0 last year, I was reading an article in a gun-industry trade publication discussing prevailing handgun sales [...]
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- 2025
19. CUTTING-EDGE CARBON: KIMBER'S BRAND NEW MAKO CARBON COMPACT SERIES REPRESENTS AN EVOLUTIONARY STEP IN STRIKER- FIRED PISTOL DESIGN
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Fitzpatrick, Brad
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Firearms ,Sports, sporting goods and toys industry - Abstract
There's no shortage of striker-fired 9mm pistols on the market, and Kimber knows that. But while most pistol companies have manufactured pistols that closely mimic other guns in this segment, [...]
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- 2025
20. THE ECHELON MARCHES ON: SPRINGFIELD WASTES NO TIME IN TURNING OUT A COMPACT VERSION OF ITS STRIKER-FIRED FLAGSHIP. MEET THE ECHELON 4.0C
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Rupp, J. Scott
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Springfield Armory Inc. ,Firearms ,Firearms industry ,Sports, sporting goods and toys industry - Abstract
The folks at Springfield Armory are good at a lot of things. Resting on their laurels is not one of them. In the space of about two years, the company [...]
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- 2025
21. NIGHT MOVES: CZ UPDATES THE P-09 WITH THE NEW NOCTURNE, BRINGING IMPROVEMENTS THAT MAKE THE GUN A BETTER DEFENSIVE DA/SA PISTOL
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Fitzpatrick, Brad
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Firearms ,Firearms industry ,Sports, sporting goods and toys industry - Abstract
Ever since Gaston Glock introduced his polymer-frame striker-fired pistol to the United States in the mid-1980s, handgun designs have progressively moved away from double-action/single-action semiauto pistols. Today, the vast majority [...]
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- 2025
22. THE CASE OF STEEL V. POLYMER
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Jardim, Frank
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Polymer industry ,Firearms ,Polymers ,Hobbies and crafts ,Travel, recreation and leisure - Abstract
On the surface, it seems a little odd to make a steel frame version of a polymer frame pistol. Outside of legacy platforms like the 1911 or Walther PPK, you [...]
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- 2025
23. A MASTEREDPIECE COLT SHERIFF'S MODEL
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Garbers, Alan
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Firearms ,Hobbies and crafts ,Travel, recreation and leisure - Abstract
Over the years, I have encountered various engraved firearms, from rudimentary bunkhouse scratching using old leather punches to the more recent trend of machine laser etching. I have seen examples [...]
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- 2025
24. PIETTA'S KING TRIO WHEEL GUN
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Hoover, Jeff, "Tank"
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Firearms ,Hobbies and crafts ,Travel, recreation and leisure - Abstract
Spaghetti Westerns were the rage of the early '60s. Italians loved America's Wild West culture, displaying this affection (or maybe affliction) in the form of making shoot em-up 'Westerns.' Of [...]
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- 2025
25. 70 YEARS YOUNG! GREAT WESTERN REVOLVERS: GUNS MAGAZINE'S HISTORIC JOURNEY
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Huntington, Roy
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Firearms ,Sports, sporting goods and toys industry - Abstract
I'm not sure what it means, but I turned 70 the same year GUNS turned 70. How's that again? I know ... I know ... but I'm in good company. [...]
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- 2025
26. GERMAN SPORT GUNS GSG-9 FROM AMERICAN TACTICAL: For Home Defense and Fun at the Range!
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DeNiro, Vincent L.
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Firearms ,Firearms industry -- International economic relations ,Sports, sporting goods and toys industry - Abstract
I became very familiar with American Tactical, Inc. (ATI) back in 2007, when I met its founder and CEO Tony Dichario while I worked for Beretta. Prior to that, I [...]
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- 2024
27. TISAS USA'S NEW PX 5.7X28MM OR PISTOL: Optics Ready, 20+1 Capacity, Economical and Fun to Shoot!
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Fortier, David M.
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Firearms ,Sports, sporting goods and toys industry - Abstract
I was as surprised as anyone by the sudden resurrection of FN Herstal's 5.7x28mm cartridge. This small bore PDW cartridge had, for all intents and purposes, appeared dead in the [...]
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- 2024
28. SUPER HORNET: THE RUGER SUPER REDHAWK, NOW IN .22 HORNET
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Boddington, Craig
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Firearms ,Business ,Sports, sporting goods and toys industry - Abstract
THE RUGER SUPER REDHAWK IS A BIG, burk revolver. Since its introduction in Guns 6c Ammo's November 1979 issue its been chambered in powerful handgun cartridges. The 44 Remington Magnum [...]
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- 2024
29. HEAVY METAL
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Firearms ,Business ,Sports, sporting goods and toys industry - Abstract
SIG SAUER ANNOUNCED a number of new versions of its flagship P320 pistol The P320-XFIVE SXG is 8 dedicated competition version of the striker-tired 9mm. Guns & Ammo staff first [...]
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- 2024
30. SHOT FIDELITY
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Firearms ,Company business management ,Business ,Sports, sporting goods and toys industry - Abstract
BRAVO COMPANY MANUFACTURING 'BCM; has long built high-quality AR 15s and M4 style firearms. BCM is led by U S. Marine Paul Buffoni, who founded the business building AR-pattern rifles [...]
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- 2024
31. A TACTICAL EDGE: LANGDON TACTICAL'S TWEAKS TURN THE BERETTA 92 INTO A TOP-FLIGHT, FLAT-SHOOTING 9MM
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Wood, Keith
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Firearms ,Firearms industry ,Sports, sporting goods and toys industry - Abstract
Customizing factory handguns to increase their performance potential is incredibly common these days. It seems that, no matter what brand of pistol, there is a company out there willing to [...]
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- 2024
32. A BACKCOUNTRY HAMMER: TAURUS INTRODUCES A 10MM VERSION OF ITS TH DOUBLE-ACTION/SINGLE-ACTION SEMIAUTO
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Scott Rupp, J.
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Firearms ,Sports, sporting goods and toys industry - Abstract
Reports of the death of the double-action/single-action semiautomatic have been greatly exaggerated. Certainly our military's decision to move away from this design to the now-ubiquitous striker-fired system didn't do the [...]
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- 2024
33. BIG BAD BERSA: BERSA TAKES ON JOHN BROWNING'S 1911, OFFERING SIX NEW .45S BUILT AT THE COMPANY'S NEW GEORGIA MANUFACTURING FACILITY
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Fitzpatrick, Brad
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Firearms ,Sports, sporting goods and toys industry - Abstract
Most shooters associate the Bersa brand with its compact Thunder semiauto pistol line, so it may have come as a surprise when Bersa introduced a new B1911.45 ACP semiauto single-action [...]
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- 2024
34. Determining demographic and previous suicide risk factors associated with developing a plan for suicide with a firearm
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Bond, Allison E., Gerry, Samuel, Bryan, Craig J., and Anestis, Michael D.
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- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. GUN SHOW.
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McKevitt, Andrew C.
- Subjects
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MASS shootings , *GLORY of God , *FIREARMS , *JUDGMENT Day , *VICTIMS - Published
- 2024
36. Adverse childhood experiences and firearm storage patterns
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Testa, Alexander, Fu, Karyn, Jackson, Dylan B., Semenza, Daniel C., and McKay, Sandra
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- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Engaging in Lethal Means Safety (ELMS): An Evaluation of a Suicide Prevention Means Safety Training Program for Mental Health First Responders.
- Author
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Collins, Christopher
- Abstract
Firearm-related suicide is a preventable yet leading cause of death in the United States, and screening for access to firearms in clinical settings is rare. The lack of screening in clinical practice may be compounded by the fact that clinicians are not often trained to effectively screen for access to lethal means. This article evaluates the effectiveness of the novel Engaging in Lethal Means Safety (ELMS) suicide prevention program. ELMS is a theoretically driven, empirically supported lethal means safety training program that trains mental health first responders in engaging clients in discussions of lethal means safety with a particular focus on firearm access and storage. Pretest, posttest, and one-month follow-up assessments measured knowledge of lethal means, confidence, and comfort in screening for access to lethal means, and future intent to counsel on means safety measures. All constructs increased significantly at posttest. Confidence was sustained at posttest. Comfort and intent to counsel levels decreased at follow-up but not to pretraining levels. Booster sessions are recommended for future iterations of the program to further sustain overall effects. Further, additional research using a treatment control is encouraged. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Firearm Homicide Mortality is Linked to Food Insecurity in Major US Metropolitan Cities.
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Ghio, Michael, Ali, Ayman, Simpson, John Tyler, Campbell, Alexandra, Duchesne, Juan, Tatum, Danielle, Chaparro, M. Pia, Constans, Joseph, Fleckman, Julia, Theall, Katherine, and Taghavi, Sharven
- Subjects
- *
STANDARD metropolitan statistical areas , *SHOOTINGS (Crime) , *SOCIAL determinants of health , *FOOD security , *CITIES & towns , *SINGLE parents - Abstract
Background: Gun violence disproportionately affects metropolitan areas of the United States (US). There is limited information regarding the influence of social determinants of health, such as food insecurity (FI) on firearm homicide mortality (FHM) in major metropolitan cities in the US. We sought to examine the relationship between FI and FHM. Materials and Methods: This was a cross-sectional analysis examining the largest 51 US major metropolitan statistical areas (MSAs) using data from 2018. Demographic data, markers of social inequities, and firearm homicide data were obtained from the US Census Bureau, US Department of Education, and the Frey and Brookings Institute. Food insecurity prevalence was obtained from Feeding America. Spearman ρ and linear regression were performed. Results: Using Spearman rho analysis, higher FI (r = 0.55, P < 0.001) was associated with FHM. Other variables associated with FHM included percent Black/African American (AA) (r = 0.77, P < 0.001), poverty rate (r = 0.53, P < 0.001), and percent of children living in single parent households (r = 0.58, P < 0.001). In linear regression analyses, FI was associated with increased FHM, with 1.3 additional FHM events for each unit increase in FI (β = 1.33, 95% CI 0.27-2.39, P = 0.02). The percent of a population that is Black/AA was also associated with FHM, with more than 4 additional cases for each 1% increase in the population (β = 4.32, 95% CI 3.26-5.38, P < 0.001). Conclusion: Food insecurity may influence FHM in major US metropolitan cities. Community- and hospital-based programs that target FI may help combat the gun violence epidemic and decrease gun violence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. Mental Illness, Gun Access and Carrying: A Test of Competing Hypotheses.
- Author
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Baumann, Miranda L.
- Subjects
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PEOPLE with mental illness , *MENTAL illness , *INTIMATE partner violence , *SUICIDE prevention , *VIOLENCE prevention , *SOCIOCULTURAL factors , *SHOOTINGS (Crime) - Abstract
Access to firearms among individuals with mental health problems has been a source of protracted debate among policymakers, the media, and the public, writ large. At the center of this controversy are questions about the nature and consequences of gun access in the context of mental illness. The lack of substantial empirical evidence, due in part to limited access to quality data, plays a significant role in perpetuating ongoing debate. To address this problem, this study uses data from the National Comorbidity Survey Replication to evaluate the relative importance of several clinical, cultural, and criminological factors in explaining gun access and carrying among adults with and without mental illnesses. Multivariate analyses reveal that, whereas past year disorder (of any type or severity) and other clinical characteristics were unrelated to firearm access, several cultural factors such as childhood rurality (e.g., ORrural vs. urban: 3.59; 95% CI: 2.52, 5.12) and the criminological experience of early intimate partner violence (e.g., ORvictim only vs. noexp: 1.84; 95% CI: 1.50, 2.26) were. None were predictive of carrying. Further, none of the relationships observed were conditioned on any of the clinical characteristics. These results indicate that people with mental illnesses likely own and carry guns for the same reasons and in the same contexts as others. Additional updated and quality data is needed to further explore these issues; however, these finding suggest that suicide and violence prevention efforts targeting people with mental illnesses need to be sensitive to the cultural and personal significance of guns. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Depictions of Firearms and Other Projectile Weapons in Top-Selling Japanese Manga.
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Lee, Yen-Han and DeJong, William
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MANGA (Art) , *MACHINE guns , *TEENAGE boys , *PROJECTILES , *FIREARMS - Abstract
Firearm violence is a pressing public health issue in the United States and becoming increasingly so worldwide. This concern has prompted researchers to examine the prevalence of such violence in media entertainment. Japanese manga have a large youth readership in the U.S., yet research on their depictions of firearms is presently lacking. We randomly selected 50 chapters from each of ten top-selling manga series worldwide (N = 500) to identify dialogue, action, and other illustrations involving handguns, rifles, machine guns, other projectile weapons, and bombs. Of the 500 chapters, 129 (25.8%) had at least one depiction of a firearm or other projectile weapon, with 684 instances of characters handling (e.g., carrying, holding, firing, reloading) such a weapon. Of the 384 unique characters so depicted, the vast majority were males (88.3%), adults (92.2%), and "good" characters (73.4%). Manga readers, especially male adolescents and preteens, are frequently exposed to storylines in which one or more characters are using a firearm or other projectile weapon. Working collaboratively, manga publishers and distributors should act to develop and implement a comprehensive rating system to flag content that may be harmful to youth so that parents can more easily monitor what their children are reading. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Examining the Relation Between Early Violence Exposure and Firearm-Related Experiences in Emerging Adulthood: A Longitudinal Cohort Study.
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Osborne, Melissa C., Reidy, Dennis E., Temple, Jeff R., DeMello, Annalyn, and Lu, Yu
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DOMESTIC violence , *YOUNG adults , *TRANSITION to adulthood , *VIOLENCE prevention , *PATH analysis (Statistics) , *INTIMATE partner violence , *PHYSICAL abuse - Abstract
Firearms are a leading cause of death among adolescents and young adults in the United States. Early exposure to violence, as a victim or witness, is associated with increased risk of firearm-related experiences, including carrying and threatening others with a gun. These experiences, in turn, increase the risk of both fatal and non-fatal firearm injuries. Using an ethnically diverse sample of emerging adults, we build on prior research by examining the link between early violence exposure at multiple contexts of the social-ecological model and multiple firearm-related experiences (i.e., firearm-threatening victimization, firearm-threatening perpetration, and firearm carriage). We analyzed data from a 10-year longitudinal study of 1042 youth in the Southern United States. Experiencing childhood physical abuse was associated with both firearm-threatening victimization and perpetration in emerging adulthood. Additionally, exposure to neighborhood and interparental violence were linked to threatening others with firearms and carrying firearms, respectively. Counter to expectations, bullying victimization did not emerge as a predictor of any firearm-related experiences. Findings highlight the importance of cross-cutting violence prevention efforts to prevent high-risk firearm-related behaviors among emerging adults. Programs for children and adolescents that address these types of violence exposure should highlight coping skills and sources of positive social support to bolster protective factors against firearm-related outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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42. Effect of Exercise Intensity on Biathlon Standing Shooting Performance and Rifle Movement during Outdoor Roller Skiing.
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DANIELSEN, JØRGEN, LUCHSINGER, HARRI, RAVNDAL, ANNA, LAAKSONEN, MARKO S., SANDBAKK, ØYVIND, and MCGHIE, DAVID
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SHOOTING (Sports) , *STANDING position , *ACCELEROMETERS , *ACCELERATION (Mechanics) , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *EXERCISE intensity , *FIREARMS , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *ODDS ratio , *SKIING , *ATHLETIC ability , *FACTOR analysis , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *PHYSIOLOGICAL effects of acceleration - Abstract
Purpose: The objective of this study is to investigate the effect of exercise intensity on standing shooting performance and related technical variables in elite biathletes performing roller skiing and live shooting outdoors. Methods: Nineteen male biathletes performed two 5-shot series in the following order of exercise intensity: rest, low (percentage of maximum heart rate, 73 ± 4; blood lactate, 1.5 ± 0.3 mmol·L−1), moderate (84 ± 3; 2.4 ± 0.6), "race-pace" (90 ± 2; 4.5 ± 0.8), and "final-lap" (i.e., near-maximal effort: 93 ± 3; 8.7 ± 1.4). Except for rest, each shooting series was preceded by 1-km roller ski skating on a competition track. Rifle movements and triggering were determined from marker-based motion capture and accelerometer data. The primary variables were shooting outcome (hit/miss) and distance from center (dC), determined from an electronic target, and barrel velocity. Mediation analyses for shooting outcome and dC were conducted with barrel velocity (mean over last 0.25 s before triggering) as mediator and intensity as predictor. Results: Exercise intensity increased the likelihood of miss at "race" (odds ratio (OR), 2.2; 95% CI, 1.0–4.7) and "final-lap" (OR, 2.8; 95% CI, 1.4–5.8) intensities compared with rest, with no meaningful differences between rest, low, and moderate intensities. Furthermore, intensity affected dC (~32 ± 15 mm at rest, low, and moderate, 36 ± 20 mm at "race," and 40 ± 23 mm at "final-lap"; P < 0.001). Barrel velocity was a partial mediator of both shooting outcome and dC, explaining some, but not all, of the effect of intensity. Conclusions: Exercise intensity seems to have a clear negative effect on standing shooting performance in biathlon, which is partially explained by an increase in barrel velocity. Deteriorating effects were mainly seen at the two highest (race-like) intensities. Accordingly, for specificity reasons, more shooting practice should perhaps be performed at higher, competition-like exercise intensities than what is currently the norm. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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43. Proportion of total DNA consistent with the known owner on different areas of law enforcement owned firearms.
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Oefelein, Rachel H., Cresswell, Sarah, and Matheson, Carney
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FIREARMS owners , *DNA , *LEGAL evidence , *LAW enforcement , *FIREARMS - Abstract
If a DNA profile obtained from evidence is consistent with an individual, there are several hypotheses on the activity level that could be evaluated in relation to the evidence. Was the DNA deposited by the owner or routine handler of the firearm? Was the individual's DNA transferred via another means to the firearm? Gaining insights as to the quantities of DNA typically obtained from an owner of a firearm from different areas of the item may aid the examiner in more effectively evaluating the evidence. This study focused on deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) collected from the trigger and trigger guard, the frame and slide, and the front and rear sight areas of 16 law enforcement-issued firearms. All samples that were suitable for comparison supported the DNA profile under the proposition if the owner of the firearm was a contributor to the DNA profile obtained from the sample. Additionally, 93% of the samples were assigned a likelihood ratio (LR) associated with a contributor that was estimated to account for greater than 70% of the DNA profile. Establishing data that can be used for evaluative reporting will enhance the DNA examiner's ability to better explain the evidence in a courtroom setting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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44. Harmful Marketing: An Overlooked Social Determinant of Health.
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Westling, Erika, Gordon, James, Meng, Paul M., O'Hara, Cassandra A., Purdum, Brandon, Bonner, Andrew C., and Biglan, Anthony
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This paper reviews evidence about the impact of marketing on ill health. We summarize evidence that marketing practices in six industries (tobacco, alcohol, pharmaceutical, processed food, firearm, and fossil fuel) are causal influences on the occurrence of injury, disease, and premature death. For each industry, we provide a brief overview on the extent of harmful marketing, efforts from each industry to obscure or otherwise conceal the impact of their marketing strategies, and efforts to counter the impact of harmful marketing in these industries. However, considering the ubiquitous belief that regulation is harmful to society, little headway has been made in reducing harmful marketing. We propose the substitution of a public health framework for the currently dominant free market ideology. Doing so would situate harmful marketing as a social determinant of health and consolidate the disparate efforts to regulate marketing of harmful products. Implications for future policy and research efforts are discussed. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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45. Firearm Access and Socio-Structural Factors Related to Suicidality Among Youth With Diverse Sexual, Gender, and Racial Identities.
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Parchem, Benjamin, Rudo-Stern, Jenna, Bratland, Lindsey, Molock, Sherry D., and Rider, G. Nic
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Objective: Elevated rates of suicidal ideation (SI) and suicide attempts (SA) among youth, particularly multiply marginalized youth, are occurring in the context of youths' access to household firearms. Research examining how perceived access to firearms is related to SI and SA among youth with marginalized identities is limited and often neglects to consider intersectionality. This study explored how intersecting social identities and positions, access to firearms, and socio-structural factors were associated with SI and SA for youth. Method: The analytic sample (N = 17,794) included 7-12th grade students who participated in the 2021 Dane County Youth Assessment. Exhaustive CHAID – a decision tree matrix approach – examined all possible combinations of self-reported sociodemographic characteristics (gender identity, sexual identity, racial identity, grade, and firearm access) and socio-structural variables (bias-based bullying, school belongingness, and social pressure) to predict mutually exclusive groups of youth based on past-year SI and SA. Results: SI and SA was most prevalent among intersectional groups with multiply marginalized identities and access to firearms. Socio-structural factors, including bias-based bullying victimization, lack of school belongingness, and social pressure, were characteristic of groups with higher prevalence of SI and SA. Conclusions: While the marginalized youth in this sample have lower access to firearms, the prevalence of SI and SA was highest among multiply marginalized youth who reported access to firearms in the context of bias-based bullying, social pressure, and a lack of school belongingness. Youth suicide prevention efforts would be strengthened by policies that address firearm access and improve the school environment. HIGHLIGHTS: There was a higher prevalence of suicidality among marginalized youth, particularly those with firearm access. Bullying, belonging, and social pressure informed patterns in youth suicidality. Youth suicide prevention should address firearm access and school environment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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46. Changes in Rates of Suicide by Mass Shooters, 1980–2019.
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Girgis, Ragy R., Hesson, Hannah, Brucato, Gary, Lieberman, Jeffrey A., Appelbaum, Paul S., and Mann, J. John
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Objective: The rate of worldwide mass shootings increased almost 400% over the last 40 years. About 30% are followed by the perpetrator's fatal or nonfatal suicide attempt. Method: We examined the rate of fatal and nonfatal attempts among 528 mass shooters over the last 40 years and their relationship to detected mental illness to better understand this specific context of suicide. We collected information on U.S.-based, personal-cause mass murders that involved one or more firearms, from online sources. Results: A greater proportion of mass shooters from 2000 to 2019 took or attempted to take their own lives (40.5%) compared with those from 1980 to 1999 (23.2%, p < 0.001). More than double the proportion of perpetrators who made a fatal or nonfatal suicide attempt had a history of non-psychotic psychiatric/neurologic symptoms (38.9%), compared with perpetrators who did not make a fatal or nonfatal suicide attempt (18.1%; p < 0.001). Among mass shooters who made fatal or nonfatal suicide attempts, 77 of 175 (44%) did not have any recorded psychiatric, neurologic, or substance use condition. Of the 98 mass shooters who made fatal or non-fatal suicide attempts and had a psychiatric, substance use, or neurologic condition, 41 had depressive disorders. Conclusion: It is possible that a lack of information about the perpetrators' mental health or suicidal ideation led to an underestimation of their prevalence. These data suggest that suicide associated with mass shootings may represent a specific context for suicide, and approaches such as psychological autopsy can help to ascertain when psychiatric illness mediates the relationship between mass shootings and suicide. HIGHLIGHTS: We examined 528 mass shootings. A greater proportion of mass shooters from 2000-2019 made a fatal or nonfatal suicide attempt (123/304, 40.5%) compared with mass shooters from 1980-1999 (52/224, 23.2%), χ2 = 17.3, p<.001. More than double the proportion of perpetrators who made a fatal or nonfatal suicide attempt had a history of non-psychotic psychiatric/neurologic symptoms (38.9%), compared with those who did not (18.1%; p < 0.001). Among mass shooters who made a fatal or nonfatal suicide attempt, 77 of 175 (44%) did not have any recorded psychiatric, neurologic, or substance use condition. However, it is possible that a lack of information about the perpetrators' mental health or suicidal ideation led to an underestimation of their prevalence. These results suggest that perpetrators may have considered suicide a potential outcome of such an event, and/or that the perpetrators' high levels of aggression and anger, accompanied by an impaired capacity for restraint, resulted in homicide followed by suicidal behavior. Psychological autopsies can clarify the role of psychiatric illness and more extreme aggressive traits in homicide-suicide instances of mass shootings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
- Full Text
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47. A Cultural Script for Suicide Among White Men in the Mountain West Region of the United States.
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Pepper, Carolyn M., Dumas, Rachael E., Glenn, Lara E., Perry, Kandice M., Zeller, Gabriella M., and Collins, Lauryn N.
- Abstract
The states of the Mountain West region of the United States consistently have the highest rates of suicide in the country, a pattern particularly pronounced in older White men. Although multiple constructs have been proposed to explain this long-standing pattern, including social isolation, cultural values, and psychopathology, relatively little research has been conducted to directly examine the predictive role of these risk factors and how they interact. We review the extant research for these constructs to establish (a) whether the risk factor occurs at a higher rate or is otherwise more influential in this region compared to the rest of the country and (b) whether the risk factor may account for specific effects in older White men in order to determine whether the evidence supports the role of each risk factor in understanding the high rates of suicide among older White men in this region. Using the results of this review, we then present a possible cultural script for suicide based on cultural scripts of gender and suicide theory (Canetto, 1997, 2017, 2021) that describes who dies by suicide, the methods they use, their emotions and motives, and the cultural understanding of the causes and acceptability of their suicidal behaviors within the Mountain West. This cultural script can serve as a guide for researchers investigating the complex mechanisms that account for elevated rates of suicide in this region. Public Significance Statement: Based on a review of the research on elevated suicide rates in the Mountain West, we propose a cultural script for suicide that describes who dies by suicide, how people in this region may view suicide, when it is considered acceptable, and what meanings are communicated through the act of suicide. This proposed cultural script could guide future research and policy to reduce suicides in this region. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
- Full Text
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48. Survey of Firearm Storage Practices and Preferences Among Parents and Caregivers of Children.
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Haag, Meredith B., Dennis, Catlin H., McGaughey, Steven, Gilbert, Tess A., DeFrancesco, Susan, Gallardo, Adrienne R., Hoffman, Benjamin D., and Carlson, Kathleen F.
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RESEARCH funding , *HOME accident prevention , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *FIREARMS , *CHILDREN'S accident prevention , *HOSPITAL emergency services , *COST benefit analysis , *BIOMETRY , *SURVEYS , *GUNSHOT wounds , *ODDS ratio , *PSYCHOLOGY of parents , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *CAREGIVER attitudes , *MEDICAL equipment safety measures - Abstract
Introduction: The American College of Emergency Physicians supports community- and hospitalbased programs that intervene to prevent firearm-related injury. To this end, the distribution of firearm locks or storage devices in the emergency department (ED) may help achieve this target. To inform secure firearm storage programs for households with children and firearms, we examined firearm storage practices, device preferences, and cost tolerance among parents/caregivers of children. Methods: Between April 2018-November 2019, we conducted and analyzed an in-person survey of 294 caregivers, aged =18, with both children and firearms in the home. Surveys assessed reasons for firearm ownership, storage practices and device preferences among five storage-device options, and prices participants were willing to pay for devices. Practices and preferences were examined by participant characteristics. We used logistic regression to estimate odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals for associations of interest. Results: Most participants (73%) reported personal protection as a reason for owning firearms, and nearly 80% owned at least one firearm storage device. Over half (55%) owned cable locks, but only 36% of owners reported regularly using them. Rapid-access devices (electronic and biometric lockboxes) were less commonly owned (26%) but more likely to be regularly used (73%). The most highly rated storage device features were the following: the ability to store the firearm unloaded (87.3%); the ability to store the firearm loaded (79.1%); and device affordability (65%). Most participants (78%) preferred rapidaccess devices over other options. Participants were willing to pay more for products that afforded rapid access to the firearm. Participants reported they would pay a median of $100 for a pushbutton rapidaccess product ($80 retail), and $150 for a biometric lockbox ($210 retail). Conclusion: Understanding the storage practices and preferences among firearm-owning households with children can help inform ED injury-prevention screening and firearm safety practice implementation. Our results suggest that rapid-access devices may be the most preferable firearm storage devices for distribution by secure storage programs, and costs are likely minimal given parental/caregiver willingness to pay. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
- Full Text
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49. Female Victims of Firearm Intimate Partner Violence: Characterization and Lethality Predictors.
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Callaghan, Lauren T., Moran, Gracen, Brisola, Deborah, Blackburn, Kyle, Camarena, Belia, Dumbre, Ojas, Cain, Cary, Perez-Stable, Caitlin, Lee, Tiffany, Seger, Catherine, and Naik-Mathuria, Bindi
- Abstract
Objective: To characterize the sociological risk factors for firearm intimate partner violence (IPV) among women in Texas, with a focus on lethal predictors to aid in screening and intervention guidelines. Methods: A retrospective medical and forensic chart review was conducted and supplemented by news sources, public police reports, and court records on firearm cases in Houston, TX, from 2018 to 2020. IPV was defined as a cis-gendered female victim of firearm violence from a current or ex-intimate partner. Non-IPV was defined as cis-gendered female victims of firearm violence from strangers, friends/acquaintances, gang, client, or similar relationships. Numeric variables were compared using the Wilcoxon rank-sum test and reported as median [Q1, Q3]. Categorical variables were compared using Fisher's exact test and reported as count (%). Results: A total of 102 cases of IPV were identified. Nonspousal IPV was more prevalent than spousal (65.7% versus 34.3%). Lethal injuries, older age, home location, and head injuries were more prevalent in the IPV cohort. Older age, spousal perpetrator, home shooting location, and history of prior domestic abuse were associated with lethal IPV. There were 31 cases of murder-suicide. During the COVID-19 pandemic, IPV cases increased by 91.3%, with lethal cases increasing by 57.6%. Conclusion: Risk factors for overall IPV and lethal IPV are not the same; therefore, it is imperative that all women, irrespective of race, age, or relationship status, be screened for IPV and prior domestic violence to allow intervention and prevention of lethal IPV. Patients should also be screened for personal or partner access to firearms as firearm IPV is a highly lethal form of violence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Firearms and Extortions in Mexico, 2012 to 2021.
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Weigend Vargas, Eugenio, Pérez Ricart, Carlos, Portugal, Jorge, and Goldstick, Jason E.
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RESEARCH funding , *CRIMINALS , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *WEAPONS , *SCHOOLS , *UNIVERSITIES & colleges , *FIREARMS , *SOCIAL role , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *CRIME victims , *SURVEYS , *ODDS ratio , *RESEARCH , *POLICE , *COMPARATIVE studies , *CONFIDENCE intervals , *SHOOTINGS (Crime) - Abstract
The study of firearm violence in Mexico has primarily focused on homicides and trafficking. Less attention has been given to understanding how firearms affect other crimes and facilitate criminal activity beyond drug markets. By analyzing two questions, this study explores the role of firearms in extortions perpetrated in Mexico from 2012 to 2021. Questions are: What is the likelihood of reporting extortions to the police if offenders exhibited firearms? What is the likelihood of compliance with demands when offenders are armed with firearms? We obtained data from Mexico's National Crime Victimization Surveys and analyzed 2,619 extortions reported from 2012 to 2021. To explore our research questions, we ran two binary logistic regressions. Our dependent variables were dichotomous (reported to police = 1, complied with demands = 1). The independent variables were weapon types (extortions involving firearms as the reference group). We controlled for victim demographics as well as crime characteristics. Our results indicate that 40% of these extortions (n = 1,058) were perpetrated with a firearm. Fifty-two percent of extortions were perpetrated by unarmed offenders (n = 1,348) and 8% (n = 213) were perpetrated with other weapons (no firearms). Models suggest that, when compared to extortions perpetrated by unarmed offenders or those exhibiting other weapons (no firearms), victims of extortions involving firearms are less likely to report these crimes to police, mainly because of fear of reprisal. Similarly, victims are more likely to comply with demands if offenders exhibit firearms. Findings highlight the role of firearms in criminal enterprises and support the need for a comprehensive policy agenda to address firearm violence in Mexico. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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