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Guns
Don't Kill Kids, Irresponsible Adults With Guns Do
by
John R. Lott, Jr.
by John R. Lott, Jr.
DIGG THIS
Should your
doctor ask your child if you own a gun?
Guidelines
issued by the American Academy of Pediatric say "yes."
They warn
that “Children
are curious even if they’ve had some sort of firearm training. That’s
why parents taking responsibility for safe gun storage is so essential.”
Doctors across
the United States are being advised to interrogate children about
mom and dad’s "bad" behavior.
It sounds
simple enough, but the problem is that the advice ignores the benefits
and exaggerates the costs of gun ownership.
Take a recent
example from Massachusetts that was discussed in the Boston
Herald:
"Debbie is
a mom from Uxbridge who was in the examination room when the pediatrician
asked her 5-year-old, 'Does Daddy own a gun?'
"When the
little girl said yes, the doctor began grilling her and her mom
about the number and type of guns, how they are stored, etc.
"If the incident
had ended there, it would have merely been annoying.
"But when
a friend in law enforcement let Debbie know that her doctor had
filed a report with the police about her family’s (entirely legal)
gun ownership, she got mad."
Perhaps it
was only a matter of time. Accidental gun deaths involving children
get national coverage. News programs stage experiments with 5- and
6-year-olds in a room filled with toys and a gun. Shocking pictures
show the children picking up the gun and playing with it like a
toy. For years, the Clinton administration would show public service
ads with the voices or pictures of young children between the ages
of 3 and 7 implying an epidemic of accidental gun deaths involving
children.
With all this
attention, the fear is understandable, but it is still irresponsible.
Convincing patients not to own guns or to at least lock them up
will cost more lives than it will save. It also gives a misleading
impression of what poses the greatest dangers to children.
Accidental
gun deaths among children are fortunately much rarer than most people
believe. Consider the following numbers.
In 2003, for
the United States, the Centers for Disease Control reports that
28
children under age 10 died from accidental shots. With some
90 million gun owners and about 40 million children under 10, it
is hard to find any item as commonly owned in American homes, as
potentially as lethal, that has as low of an accidental death rate.
These deaths
also have little to do with "naturally curious" children shooting
other children. From 1995 to 2001 only about nine
of these accidental gun deaths each year involve a child under 10
shooting another child or themselves. Overwhelmingly, the shooters
are adult males with long histories of alcoholism, arrests for violent
crimes, automobile crashes, and suspended or revoked driver's licenses.
Even if gun
locks can stop the few children who abuse a gun from doing so, gun
locks cannot stop adults from firing their own gun. It makes a lot
more sense for doctors to ask if "daddy" has a violent criminal
record or a history of substance abuse, rather than ask if they
own a gun.
Fear about
guns also seems greatest among those who know the least about them.
For example,
those unfamiliar with guns don’t realize that most young children
simply couldn’t fire your typical semi-automatic pistol. Even the
few who posses the strength to pull back the slide on the gun are
unlikely to know that they must do that to put the bullet in the
chamber or that they need to switch off the safety.
With so many
greater dangers facing children everyday from common household items,
it is not obvious why guns have been singled out. Here are some
of the other ways that children under 10 died in 2004.
Over 1,400
children were killed by cars, almost 260 of those deaths were
young pedestrians. Bicycle and space heater accidents take many
times more children’s lives than guns. Over 90 drowned in bathtubs.
The most recent yearly data available indicates that over 30 children
under age 5 drowned in five-gallon plastic water buckets.
Yet,
the real problem with this gun phobia is that without guns, victims
are much more vulnerable to criminal attack. Guns are used defensively
some 2 million times each year. Even though the police are extremely
important in reducing crime, they simply can't be there all the
time and virtually always arrive after the crime has been committed.
Having a gun is by far the safest course of action when one is confronted
by a criminal.
The cases
where young children use guns to save their family’s lives rarely
makes the news. Recent examples where children’s lives were clearly
lost because guns were locked and inaccessible are ignored.
Recent
research
that I did examining juvenile accidental gun deaths for all U.S.
states from 1977 to 1998, found that sixteen
states mandating that guns be locked up had no impact. What did
happen, however, was that criminals were emboldened to attack people
in their homes and crimes were more successful; 300
more murders and 4,000 more rapes occurred each year in these states.
Burglaries also rose dramatically. The evidence also indicates that
states with the biggest increases in gun ownership have had the
biggest drops in violent crime.
Asking
patients about guns not only strains doctor patient relationships,
it exaggerates the dangers and risks lives. Yet, in the end, possibly
some good can come out of all this gun phobia. If your doctors ask
you whether you own a gun, rather than sarcastically asking them
if they own a space heater, why not offer to go out to a shooting
range together and teach them about guns?
This article
was originally published at Fox News.
October
12, 2007
John
Lott [send him mail] is the
author of Freedomnomics:
Why the Free Market Works and Other Half-Baked Theories Don’t
and The
Bias Against Guns (Regnery 2003).
Copyright
© 2007 John Lott
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