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Journal Article

Citation

Herring MK, Kersten CA. Prev. Chronic Dis. 2020; 17: e132.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2020, (in public domain), Publisher U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention)

DOI

10.5888/pcd17.200096

PMID

33092685

Abstract

Firearm-related mortality and its relation to public health has been a controversial topic in the United States for many years. The most commonly used source for research on gun-related deaths is the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Wide-ranging OnLine Data for Epidemiologic Research (WONDER) database, which compiles data from death certificates (1). However, there are several other published sources of gun violence data, including the Gun Violence Archive (GVA), which collects and compiles data from public news media sources (2). Although CDC WONDER is the most commonly used source for data on gun violence, concerns have been voiced around the validity of cause-of-death reporting on death certificates (5,6). We sought to compare deaths reported in CDC WONDER with deaths captured via media sources to compare the 2 mechanisms and evaluate their benefits and drawbacks. Through this project, we analyzed spatial similarities in 2017 between the CDC WONDER and GVA data sets for the contiguous United States. We compared the mortality rates in each state, the differences in the rates, and looked for evidence of spatial autocorrelation between the 2 data sets...

Despite both data sets separately showing significant spatial clustering, no significant clustering of the rate differences between the 2 data sets was apparent. Small differences in reported rates were observed and did appear to vary spatially; however, they were not significantly clustered. These reported rates may have varied slightly because of differences in mode of collection, with some states having more deaths related to gun violence detected by media reports and others having more cases detected through death certificates. However, these differences were very small and were not associated with spatial autocorrelation of rate differences. As such, these minor differences in death rates do not appear to be affected by nearby states, indicating a lack of systematic error by region that would affect the accuracy of either data set. This indicates that while these 2 data sets are comparable for conducting analyses across the continental United States, these minor rate differences may cause effects when conducting analyses on a state-to-state or county-level scale....

These findings indicate that either data set could be used for future projects looking at firearm mortality across the continental United States because of a lack of significant spatial clustering and only minor differences in the death rates between data sets. Each data set comes with its own unique challenges and benefits. The CDC WONDER data set is publicly available, has been collected and used for many years, and provides more reliable demographic data than GVA (1). However, CDC data may be difficult to use below the state level because of suppression of low numbers of events. The GVA data set provides more specific details on events, including precise latitude and longitude information, detailed data on the victims, and links to news articles with contextual information (2). However, these data must be requested for use and may include reporting biases from news sources that would be minimized in death certificate data. These results offer some flexibility to future researchers, as election for use between these 2 data sets can strictly depend on the research question of interest. One additional consideration for this type of research is the potential that both data sets are skewed in the same direction because they only capture reported deaths, though this may be minimized by capturing deaths through different mechanisms. Further research should be conducted on this topic to understand...


Language: en

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