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AbstractArticle

Gun deaths in rural and urban settings: recommendations for prevention.

L T Dresang
The Journal of the American Board of Family Practice March 2001, 14 (2) 107-115;
L T Dresang
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Abstract

BACKGROUND Family physicians can play a vital role in preventing gun violence, and better data on which to base their interventions might result in more effective prevention efforts. Using Washington State data, two assumptions on which interventions can be based were tested: compared with urban areas, rural areas have (1) a higher percentage of gun deaths from shotguns and rifles, and (2) a higher percentage of gun deaths from suicides and accidents

METHODS From 1990 to 1996, 4,271 gun deaths on Washington death certificates were classified as rural or urban. The data were retrospectively sorted and analyzed by gun type (handguns, rifles, shotguns, or other) and by intent (suicide, homicide, or accidental death).

RESULTS Compared with urban settings, rural areas had a higher percentage of gun deaths from shotguns and rifles and a higher percentage from suicides and accidents (P < .01). Two similarities, however, stand out as more important than the confirmed hypothesized differences: handguns accounted for more than 50% of gun deaths, and suicides accounted for nearly 70% of gun deaths in both urban and rural areas.

CONCLUSIONS Family physicians might want to focus their firearm safety efforts on preventing handgun deaths and suicides, which accounted for most gun deaths in rural and urban areas. Also, data from this study suggest that deaths from shotguns and rifles as well as accidental and suicide gun deaths deserve special attention in rural areas.

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The Journal of the American Board of Family Practice: 14 (2)
The Journal of the American Board of Family Practice
Vol. 14, Issue 2
1 Mar 2001
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Gun deaths in rural and urban settings: recommendations for prevention.
L T Dresang
The Journal of the American Board of Family Practice Mar 2001, 14 (2) 107-115;

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Gun deaths in rural and urban settings: recommendations for prevention.
L T Dresang
The Journal of the American Board of Family Practice Mar 2001, 14 (2) 107-115;
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