US pediatricians call for strict gun laws to protect kids

By Michele Gershberg and Jackie Frank, Reuters

NEW YORK - Pediatricians Thursday called for the strictest possible regulation of gun sales, as well as more education for parents on the dangers of having a gun at home, to prevent deaths of kids and teens.

In a policy statement published in the journal Pediatrics, researchers representing the American Academy of Pediatrics said the number of gun-related deaths in youth has dropped nationally since the mid-1990s, but is still many times higher than rates in other wealthy countries.

The report was released to coincide with the AAP National Conference and Exhibition in New Orleans.

Its most important purpose, according to co-lead author Dr. Robert Sege from Boston Medical Center, is to reiterate that kids and teens are at risk if they have access to guns.

"Most children who get injured or killed from firearms get their firearms from home," he told Reuters Health.

That is because young kids are by nature curious, he said, and teenagers are by nature impulsive - including when it comes to guns.

"There's new, better data that although the safest home for children is a home without guns, that parents can protect their child simply by keeping a gun unloaded and locked, with the ammunition locked separately," Sege said.

He and the rest of the AAP's Council on Injury, Violence, and Poison Prevention Executive Committee found that as of 2009, between 11 and 12 of every 100,000 older teens were being killed every year by gunshots. About two-thirds of those were homicides, with suicides and accidental deaths accounting for the rest.

Guns were responsible for almost 85 percent of all teen homicides that year, the researchers added. They were also the most common method of teen suicide.

The high death rate in suicide attempts using guns - compared to pills or sharp objects - makes at-home access to firearms especially dangerous for impulsive teens, according to the pediatrician group.

"For 98 percent of families every year, whether you have a gun or not is irrelevant. Most of the time nothing happens, the way that most of the time when you ride around without a seat belt, nothing bad happens," said David Hemenway, head of the Harvard Injury Control Research Center in Boston. He was not involved in drafting the policy statement.

The AAP committee also called for restoration of a controversial U.S. ban on assault weapons that expired in 2004. President Barack Obama suggested at a presidential debate earlier this week that he would renew a ban on assault weapons - a position not backed by his Republican challenger, former Massachusetts governor Mitt Romney.

Assault weapons include military-style guns designed to fire rapidly and from close range, such as semiautomatic AK-47s.

The AAP cited the cost of gun-related assaults and homicides at over $17 billion a year, due to lost productivity and medical bills. But Hemenway said the true financial burden is much higher.

"When guns are used for homicide it can destroy not only someone's life and their ability to work and so forth ... but it can destroy communities," he said. For example, businesses do not want to move into communities that have had a few shootings, and families that can afford to will move out.

He said the consensus among injury researchers has been that the best thing to do for a child's safety is to keep guns out of the house. But each family has to make that decision on its own.

"If you decide to have a gun, and it's an individual choice, what you really want to do is store it safely," Hemenway said.

Discuss this post

Tax forms should be presented to buy any gun; as people rarely refrain from claiming their children as deductions. If there are children in the home, proof of sanity, clean criminal records, and a visit must be made to the home to learn if proper precautions have been taken to conceal and lock away fire arms from children's reach.

    Reply#1 - Fri Oct 19, 2012 1:22 AM EDT

    Those damn liberal doctors want to take away our guns, just so they can protect a bunch of kids.

      Reply#2 - Fri Oct 19, 2012 2:42 AM EDT

      The devil is in the details.

      Of the assualts and homicides, that cost 17billion annually, what percentage of them were

      initiated by law-abiding citizens?

      As for 'molly cruz', proof of sanity? I suppose she has never heard of 'Doctor patient conditentiality' laws...

      • 1 vote
      Reply#3 - Fri Oct 19, 2012 8:54 AM EDT

      The biggest detail left out of the research is how many of the guns involved in these deaths were owned by law abiding citizens and not thugs that had their guns illegally? Gun laws do nothing to keep guns away from criminals but the liberals fail to grasp this concept. More laws will do nothing but empower the criminals as they will then know that only they and the po-po have guns. We all know how long it takes the po-po to respond to anything. When armed citizens are able to be present the criminal is deterred from committing the crime. Another concept liberals cannot grasp.

      • 1 vote
      Reply#4 - Sat Oct 20, 2012 6:50 PM EDT

      Well, considering that the recent CT shooter simply took guns in his parent's home which he likely would have been prevented from buying, perhaps we should think about taking technology such as retina scans to make sure guns are only operable by the people who are licensed to own them. Then make sure that there are very strict background checks, mental health clearances, etc before a gun can be purchased (if people are law abiding, the hoops aren't unreasonable). Yes, clearly I am aware that unless the whole world took on this technological device, it would do little for guns obtained outside the US and there would still be people obtaining guns illegally but it's a start. It seems that nobody wants to even engage in a respectful dialogue of possible options, when it comes to those owning guns....there is too much defensiveness and desire to protect ALL gun options at all costs. Also, there is NO sensible reason for ammunition clips that can shoot rapid fire bullets in high volumes to be available to the general public. Perhaps those of us in favor of some common sense re: guns might have more tolerance if the gun owning segment would at least acknowledge things such as that.

        #4.1 - Sat Dec 15, 2012 11:03 AM EST
        Reply

        Yes! We must certainly make it more difficult for law abiding citizens to protect themselves! "When guns are criminal, only criminals have guns."

        • 1 vote
        Reply#5 - Sun Oct 21, 2012 7:36 PM EDT

        There are all sorts of views out there on this. Let us try factual common sense. Mental health care is basically in ruins, so now we have people who need help in homes, some with guns. We do not know what this adult/kid(you do not stop growing until age 25) did to get the guns as he killed his mother. Were they locked up, left out; we should wait for the investigation to tell us. Columbine proved a ban will not work as it in effect at the time of that incident and had those two not had explosives they threw at the security personnel, they likely would have been stopped. The death pointed out above are mostly due to criminal activities like drugs and the guns are not legally obtained only a small percentage if any would be legally owned as in most states you have to be 21 to buy a handgun; and that is if a handgun was used. Last, people have killed masses with knives, clubs, rocks,even Kool Aid and criminals do not follow the laws! Anymore laws will just give criminals the upper hand against you and me, the law-abiding citizens.

          Reply#6 - Sun Dec 23, 2012 7:36 PM EST

          A stupid discussion. Abortion kills more children everyday than the most insane wack job could ever think of. Pediatricians should be more concerned with this legalized form of murder or about the breathtakingly stupid acts of a government that would repeatedly launch programs like "Fast and Furious" that deliberately put guns in the hands of criminals. Now the Ped's want this same government to take legal guns away from law abiding citizens?

          • 1 vote
          Reply#7 - Fri Jan 4, 2013 2:58 PM EST
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