• Am J Public Health · Oct 2014

    The relationship between gun ownership and stranger and nonstranger firearm homicide rates in the United States, 1981-2010.

    • Michael Siegel, Yamrot Negussie, Sarah Vanture, Jane Pleskunas, Craig S Ross, and Charles King.
    • Michael Siegel, Yamrot Negussie, Sarah Vanture, and Jane Pleskunas are with the Department of Community Health Sciences, Boston University School of Public Health, Boston, MA. Craig S. Ross is with Virtual Media Resources, Natick, MA. Charles King III is with Greylock McKinnon Associates, Cambridge, MA, and Pleiades Consulting Group, Lincoln, MA.
    • Am J Public Health. 2014 Oct 1;104(10):1912-9.

    ObjectivesWe examined the relationship between gun ownership and stranger versus nonstranger homicide rates.MethodsUsing data from the Supplemental Homicide Reports of the Federal Bureau of Investigation's Uniform Crime Reports for all 50 states for 1981 to 2010, we modeled stranger and nonstranger homicide rates as a function of state-level gun ownership, measured by a proxy, controlling for potential confounders. We used a negative binomial regression model with fixed effects for year, accounting for clustering of observations among states by using generalized estimating equations.ResultsWe found no robust, statistically significant correlation between gun ownership and stranger firearm homicide rates. However, we found a positive and significant association between gun ownership and nonstranger firearm homicide rates. The incidence rate ratio for nonstranger firearm homicide rate associated with gun ownership was 1.014 (95% confidence interval=1.009, 1.019).ConclusionsOur findings challenge the argument that gun ownership deters violent crime, in particular, homicides.

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