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Journal Article

Citation

No Author(s) Listed. Am. J. Nurs. 2023; 123(9): e12.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2023, American Nurses Association, Publisher Lippincott Williams and Wilkins)

DOI

10.1097/01.NAJ.0000978080.34688.88

PMID

37615450

Abstract

Report documents record gun sales during the COVID-19 pandemic.

Gun-related deaths in the United States from both homicide and suicide continue to increase at unprecedented rates, according to U.S. Gun Violence in 2021: An Accounting of a Public Health Crisis, an annual report from the Johns Hopkins Center for Gun Violence Solutions.

Researchers at the center analyzed the data on firearm deaths for 2021, the most recent available from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC). The data show that a rise in gun violence that began in 2019 continued unabated in 2020 and 2021. Gun-related deaths set a record in 2020, which was surpassed in 2021 with close to 49,000 people killed, an average of 134 deaths each day. Violence in general increased during the pandemic, but it was guns that fueled the surge in homicides and suicides: gun homicides rose by 45% while non-gun homicides rose by only 7%. Gun suicides increased by 10% while non-gun suicides decreased by 8%. The 2021 increases in gun-related homicides and suicides are the highest in 40 years.

The rise in gun deaths corresponds with skyrocketing gun sales during the pandemic; new background checks topped a million a week for multiple weeks in 2020 and 2021, higher than at any time since recordkeeping began in 1998. Research shows that countries with greater access to firearms have higher rates of firearm deaths; and according to the Switzerland-based Small Arms Survey, the United States far outnumbers other countries when it comes to civilian gun ownership. Though only 4% of the global population, Americans hold nearly 40% of the world's firearms. According to the Institute for Health Metrics and Evaluation, among high-income countries with populations above 10 million, the United States has the highest firearm-related death rate--4.12 per 100,000 population, compared to the second ranked country, Chile, at 1.82 per 100,000 population...


Language: en

Keywords

Humans; Pandemics; *COVID-19; Commerce

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