this article seems to have dissappeared from the reuters website - but
other July 1 articles are there - ??????

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Reuters Health Information

Nearly One in Three Americans Owns a Gun

By Kathryn Doyle

July 01, 2015

10 comments

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(Reuters Health) - Almost a third of American adults own a gun, but
the rate varies widely by state and tops out at almost 62% of people
in Alaska, new survey data show.

Gun ownership was closely tied to "social gun culture," wherein family
and friends also own guns and think less of non-gun owners,
researchers found.

"Considering the presence of deeply rooted gun culture and the
estimated number of guns in the U.S. to be 310 million, we (suspected)
that social gun culture is associated with gun ownership," said lead
author Dr. Bindu Kalesan of the Mailman School of Public Health at
Columbia University in New York.

"This association was strong even after removing the effect of other
factors such as presence of gun laws and gun deaths," Kalesan told
Reuters Health by email.

The researchers used data from a 2013 online survey of 4,000 people
over age 18 from all 50 states and the District of Columbia.
Participants were selected to be representative of the U.S. population
as a whole.

About 29% of people nationwide reported owning a gun. Only 5% of
people in Delaware and 6% in Rhode Island owned a gun, compared to
almost 62% in Alaska.

More than half of people reported owning a gun in West Virginia,
Arkansas, Montana, Wyoming and Idaho. Regionally, gun ownership was
least common in the Northeast and most common in the South and West.

About 5% of people said they used their gun for hunting, and 10%
reported attending gun safety classes.

The authors found that 32% of gun owners were exposed to "social gun
culture" compared to 6% of non-gun owners.

White males over age 55 were most likely to own guns, compared to
other demographics, according to a report of the study online June 29
in Injury Prevention.

In general, gun ownership is on the decline in the U.S., although
sales are up, so those who do own them may be buying more than one,
Kalesan said.

In comparison with other developed countries, ownership of guns by
civilians in the U.S. is extremely high, she said.

Australia, faced with increased gun deaths, made it mandatory to turn
in guns in 1996, and since then gun deaths have plummeted, she said.

In the new survey, gun ownership was least common in states with
stricter gun control policies, but it is not clear whether those laws
change the culture of the state, or if the culture of the state brings
the laws about, according to Dr. Michael Siegel of the Department of
Community Health Sciences at Boston University School of Public
Health, who wasn't involved in the new study.

"It is well established that higher gun ownership levels by state are
tied to higher homicide levels," he told Reuters Health by phone. "No
one has asked the question of why certain states have higher ownership
rates."

"Gun culture" may explain it, and may help public health experts
implement policies to decrease gun prevalence, he said.

Decades of public health messaging, TV and media campaigns have
successfully changed the social norms surrounding tobacco, another
public health hazard, and smoking has been on the decline, Siegel
said.

"It's pretty widely acknowledged that people shouldn't smoke in
public," he said. "Someone may say with guns, there's no way you can
change social norms about that, but we would have said that about
smoking 30 or 40 years ago."

Owning a firearm has health effects, increasing the probability of
your own injury, and education campaigns could highlight this, he
said.

"It's not clear that it will protect you," Siegel said. "There's a lot
of evidence that it results in accidents, and is more likely to be
used in a way that injures the owner or someone in the household."

Other industrialized countries do not tolerate the problem of gun
violence, but for some reason people in the U.S. do, he said.

"Do we really want to accept this? We don't have to accept the way
things are, we can change our culture," he said.

Policy makers should keep in mind the pervasive gun culture and the
strong association with gun ownership, Kalesan said.

Universal background checks for purchasing guns and ammunition tend to
be the most effective laws in discouraging gun ownership, she said.

SOURCE: http://bit.ly/1JuFFvD

Inj Prev 2015.

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Reuters Health Information © 2015

Cite this article: Nearly One in Three Americans Owns a Gun. Medscape.
Jun 30, 2015.

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