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An even larger number of children are hurt by
nonfatal gun related injuries. Although gun related injuries peak
in adolescence, they can affect infants and younger children too.
Younger children are most likely to be injured, either shooting
themselves or a playmate, after playing with a gun that they have
found in the home, not realizing that the gun is real or that
it is loaded.
Virginia Firearm Statistics 2003
- There were 798 firearm deaths in Virginia in 2003 making it
the second leading cause of injury death. The firearm death
rate was 10.8 per 100,000.
- The age-adjusted death rate was 10.66 per 100,000.
- Males were almost 6 times more likely to suffer a firearm
related death than were females.
- Blacks were 2 times more likely to suffer a firearm related
death than were whites.
- There were 446 firearm related suicides, 330 firearm related
homicides and 11 accidental firearm deaths.
- Firearms were the leading cause of injury for suicide deaths,
responsible for over half (56%) of these deaths.
- Handguns were used in 34% of suicides, and shotguns were used
in 17%.
- Firearms were the leading cause of homicide deaths, responsible
for almost three-fourths (73%) of these deaths.
- There were 596 firearm related injury hospitalizations in
2003 for a rate of 8 per 100,000.
- Forty-eight were self-inflicted, and 339 were assault-related.
Twenty-eight were shotgun related and 163 were handgun related.
- The median charge per episode of care was $19,462 and the
average length of stay was 6.5 days. Over 22 million dollars
were billed for firearm related hospitalizations.
- Thirty-five percent of discharges had self as the expected
source of payment, and 36% had a private payer.
- Men were at 12 times the risk of a hospitalization due to
a firearm injury than were females.
- Blacks were at almost 9 times the risk as whites for hospitalizations
from a firearm injury.
- The most common injury types were fractures (31%), internal
organs (32%), and open wounds (31%).
- There were 8 hospitalizations from BB/pellet guns for unintentional
injury, 1 for suicide and 1 for assault.
Gun Safety Tips
- Store firearms unloaded and locked with a firearm safe, locked
box, trigger or chamber lock
- Store and lock ammunition in a separate place
- Remove firearms from your home if you have a depressed or
suicidal family member
- Before you send your child to someone's house, ASK if firearms
in the home are stored unloaded and locked; ASK if the ammunition
is stored separately; ASK about shotguns and rifles too, not
just handguns
- Invite the children to play at your home if you have doubts
about the safety of someone else's home
- Talk with your children about the risk of firearm injury in
places they may visit or play
- Teach your child if she finds a firearm to leave it alone
and let an adult know right away
- Instruct your child to leave the room and tell an adult immediately
if another child shows him or her a weapon
- Ask family and friends to use these safe storage steps
Virginia Firearm Safe Storage Project
The Virginia Firearm Safe Storage
Project focuses on the distribution of cable gunlocks and
the education of parents and the community about gun safety to
reduce the number of gun related childhood injuries. To receive
gunlocks for your community project contact your local state police
headquarters.
PSA RADIO SPOT
BOY: Mom, can I sleep over Justin's house?
MOM: Sure
BOY: YES!
MOM: But let me call his parents first.
Phone rings.
MOM: Hi. I understand the boys have planned a sleep over at your
house tonight. I hope you don't mind, but I need to ask whether
you have firearms and whether they are unloaded and locked away.
That's what my husband does with his hunting rifles. You know
how curious children are. I don't want to take any chances.
ANNOC: Children are curious and they will find guns and handle
them, even if you've told them not to. Store weapons safely. Use
gunlocks. Ask about guns where your children play.
Gun owners, make sure that children are protected by keeping guns
out of their hands, like you do with poisons and matches. Don't
make children responsible for their own safety.
This message is brought to you by the Virginia Department of Health's
Center for Injury and Violence Prevention.
Links:
Visit http://www.vahealth.org/civp/pubscivp.asp
to view and order tip cards on this and other injury and violence
prevention topics.
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