Children & Guns: A Lethal Combination
Every day in America, more than 10 young people aged 19 and under are killed in gun homicides, suicides and unintentional shootings.[1] Many more are wounded. The scourge of gun violence frequently attacks the most helpless members of our society - our children.
Consider these facts...
In 1998, 2,215 children and teenagers were murdered with guns, 1,241 committed suicide with guns, and 336 died in unintentional shootings. A total of 3,792 young people were killed by firearms.[2]
Each year during 1993 through 1997, an average of 1,621 murderers who had not reached their 18th birthdays took someone's life with a gun.[3]
In 1999, 82% of murder victims aged 13 to 19 years old were killed with a firearm.[4]
During 1998, 52% of all murders of those under age 18 involved firearms. In 1986, guns were involved in 38% of such offenses.[5]
In 1995, 1 in 12 (8.3%) high school students reported having carried a gun for fighting or self-defense at least once in the last 30 days.[6]
Gun violence plagues our youth...it is the epidemic of the 1990's...
In 1995, gunshot wounds are the second leading cause of death for all teenagers 10-19.[7]
In 1997, firearm homicide was the leading cause of death for Blacks aged 15-24.[8]
According to a February 1997 report by the Centers for Disease Control, the rate of firearm death of children 0 to 14 years old is nearly twelve times higher in the U.S. than in 25 other industrialized countries combined.[9]
For every child killed by a gun, four are wounded.[10]
From 1984 to 1994, the firearm homicide death rate for 15-19 year olds increased 222 percent while the non-firearm homicide death rate decreased 12.8 percent.[11]
"The firearm injury epidemic, due largely to handgun injuries, is ten times larger than the polio epidemic of the first half of this century."[12]
Updated 1/16/01
Notes:
- Unpublished data from the Vital Statistics System, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Health Statistics, 2000.
- ibid.
- Supplemental Homicide Data from the FBI.
- FBI Uniform Crime Report, 1999, table 2.11, p.18
- ibid.
- Kannl, Warren CW, Harris WA, et al. Youth risk behavior surveillance-United States, 1993. Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, Centers for Disease Control And Prevention. 1995;44:1-56
- Health United States 1996-97 and Injury Chartbook. U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. July 1997.
- National Vital Statistics Reports. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Health Statistics, June 30, 1999. Vol. 47, No. 19.
- "Firearm-Related Death in 26 Industrialized Countries", Morbidity and Mortality Weekly Report, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, 1997, 46(5):101-105.
- Annest, JL, et.al. "National estimates of nonfatal firearm-related injuries: beyond the tip of the iceberg," Journal of the American Medical Association, 1995, 273:1749-1754
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Health Statistics, unpublished data from the Vital Statistics System, 1997.
- Christoffel, Katherine Kaufer, "Handguns and the Environments of Children", Children's Environments, 12(1), 1995, p. 42.


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