http://www.msn.com/en-us/news/us/gun-owners-face-much-higher-murder-risks-researchers-said-then-the-nra-silenced-them/ar-AAaUFQx?ocid=HPCDHP
Back in the early 1990s, the
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the National Center for
Injury Prevention and Control provided funding for studies on gun
violence. The NRA was not pleased.
“[Our
research] underwent peer review and was thought to be very solid and
worthwhile research,” says Dr. Fred Rivara, who was part of the team
that researched gun violence. “The CDC stood by our research — they had
funded it and they stood by it. Unfortunately, it raised the attention
of the National Rifle Association, who then worked with pro-gun members
of Congress to essentially stop funding firearm research.”
Rivara, a
professor of pediatrics and epidemiology at the University of
Washington at Seattle Children's Hospital, discovered that having a gun
in the home is associated with a threefold increase in the risk of a
homicide.
“The most common
reason that people have a gun is because they have it for home
protection,” he says. “Unfortunately, the data indicates that having a
gun is associated with both an increased risk of homicide, but even more
importantly, an increased risk of suicide. We know that, for example,
if there’s a gun in the home, the risk of suicide among adolescents and
young adults increases tenfold.”
No comments:
Post a Comment