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Global Mortality From Firearms, 1990-2016

Authors
Mohsen Naghavi,Laurie Marczak
Michael Kutz,Katya Shackelford,Megha Arora,Molly Miller-Petrie,Miloud Aichour,Nadia Akseer,Rajaa Al‐Raddadi,Khurshid Alam,Suliman Alghnam,Carl Antonio,Olatunde Aremu,Amit Arora,Mohsen Asadi‐Lari,Reza Assadi,Tesfay Atey,Leticia Ávila‐Burgos,Ashish Awasthi,Beatriz Quintanilla,Suzanne Barker‐Collo,Till Bärnighausen,Shahrzad Bazargan‐Hejazi,Masoud Behzadifar,Meysam Behzadifar,James Bennett,Ashish Bhalla,Zulfiqar Bhutta,Arebu Bilal,Guilherme Borges,Rohan Borschmann,Alexandra Bražinová,Julio Campuzano,Félix Carvalho,Carlos Castañeda-Orjuela,Lalit Dandona,Rakhi Dandona,Paul Dargan,Diego Leo,Samath Dharmaratne,Eric Ding,Huyen Phuc,David Doku,Kerrie Doyle,Tim Driscoll,Dumessa Edessa,Ziad El‐Khatib,Aman Endries,Alireza Esteghamati,André Faro,Farshad Farzadfar,Valery Feigin,Florian Fischer,Kyle Foreman,Richard Franklin,Nancy Fullman,Neal Futran,Tsegaye Gebrehiwot,Reyna Gutiérrez,Nima Hafezi‐Nejad,Hassan Haghparast‐Bidgoli,Gessessew Hailu,Josep Haro,Hamid Hassen,Caitlin Hawley,Delia Hendrie,Martha Hı́jar,Guoqing Hu,Olayinka Ilesanmi,Mihajlo Jakovljević,Spencer James,Sudha Jayaraman,Jost Jonas,Amaha Kahsay,Amir Kasaeian,Peter Keiyoro,Yousef Khader,Fakher Rahim,Young‐Ho Khang,Jagdish Khubchandani,Ali Kiadaliri,Christian Kieling,Young‐Eun Kim,Soewarta Kosen,Kristopher Krohn,G Kumar,Faris Lami,Van Lansingh,Heidi Larson,Shai Linn,Raimundas Lunevičius,Hassan Razek,Muhammed Razek,Reza Malekzadeh,Déborah Malta,Amanda Mason‐Jones,Richard Matzopoulos,Peter Memiah,Walter Mendoza,Tuomo Meretoja,Haftay Mezgebe,Ted Miller,Shafiu Mohammed,Maziar Moradi‐Lakeh,Rintaro Mori,Devina Nand,Cuong Nguyen,Quyen Nguyen,Dina Ningrum,Felix Ogbo,Andrew Olagunju,George Patton,Michael Phillips,Suzanne Polinder,Farshad Pourmalek,Mostafa Qorbani,Afarin Rahimi‐Movaghar,Vafa Rahimi‐Movaghar,Mahfuzar Rahman,Rajesh Kumar,Chhabi Ranabhat,David Rawaf,Salman Rawaf,Ali Rowhani‐Rahbar,Mahdi Safdarian,Saeid Safiri,Rajesh Sagar,Joseph Salama,Juan Sanabria,Milena Santric-Milicevic,Rodrigo Sarmiento-Suárez,Benn Sartorius,Maheswar Satpathy,David Schwebel,Soraya Seedat,Sadaf Sepanlou,Masood Shaikh,Nigussie Sharew,Ivy Shiue,Jasvinder Singh,Mekonnen Sisay,Vegard Skirbekk,Adauto Filho,Dan Stein,Mark Stokes,Mu’awiyyah Sufiyan,Mamta Swaroop,Bryan Sykes,Rafael Tabarés‐Seisdedos,Fentaw Tadese,Bach Tran,Tung Tran,Kingsley Ukwaja,Tommi Vasankari,Vasily Vlassov,Andrea Werdecker,Pengpeng Ye,Paul Yip,Naohiro Yonemoto,Mustafa Younis,Zoubida Zaidi,Maysaa Zaki,Simon Hay,Stephen Lim,Alan Lopez,Ali Mokdad,Theo Vos,Christopher Murray,Amanda Woods
+167 authors
,Young-Ho Khang
Journal
Published
Aug 28, 2018
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Abstract

Importance

Understanding global variation in firearm mortality rates could guide prevention policies and interventions.

Objective

To estimate mortality due to firearm injury deaths from 1990 to 2016 in 195 countries and territories.

Design, Setting, and Participants

This study used deidentified aggregated data including 13 812 location-years of vital registration data to generate estimates of levels and rates of death by age-sex-year-location. The proportion of suicides in which a firearm was the lethal means was combined with an estimate of per capita gun ownership in a revised proxy measure used to evaluate the relationship between availability or access to firearms and firearm injury deaths.

Exposures

Firearm ownership and access.

Main Outcomes and Measures

Cause-specific deaths by age, sex, location, and year.

Results

Worldwide, it was estimated that 251 000 (95% uncertainty interval [UI], 195 000-276 000) people died from firearm injuries in 2016, with 6 countries (Brazil, United States, Mexico, Colombia, Venezuela, and Guatemala) accounting for 50.5% (95% UI, 42.2%-54.8%) of those deaths. In 1990, there were an estimated 209 000 (95% UI, 172 000 to 235 000) deaths from firearm injuries. Globally, the majority of firearm injury deaths in 2016 were homicides (64.0% [95% UI, 54.2%-68.0%]; absolute value, 161 000 deaths [95% UI, 107 000-182 000]); additionally, 27% were firearm suicide deaths (67 500 [95% UI, 55 400-84 100]) and 9% were unintentional firearm deaths (23 000 [95% UI, 18 200-24 800]). From 1990 to 2016, there was no significant decrease in the estimated global age-standardized firearm homicide rate (−0.2% [95% UI, −0.8% to 0.2%]). Firearm suicide rates decreased globally at an annualized rate of 1.6% (95% UI, 1.1-2.0), but in 124 of 195 countries and territories included in this study, these levels were either constant or significant increases were estimated. There was an annualized decrease of 0.9% (95% UI, 0.5%-1.3%) in the global rate of age-standardized firearm deaths from 1990 to 2016. Aggregate firearm injury deaths in 2016 were highest among persons aged 20 to 24 years (for men, an estimated 34 700 deaths [95% UI, 24 900-39 700] and for women, an estimated 3580 deaths [95% UI, 2810-4210]). Estimates of the number of firearms by country were associated with higher rates of firearm suicide (P < .001;R2 = 0.21) and homicide (P < .001;R2 = 0.35).

Conclusions and Relevance

This study estimated between 195 000 and 276 000 firearm injury deaths globally in 2016, the majority of which were firearm homicides. Despite an overall decrease in rates of firearm injury death since 1990, there was variation among countries and across demographic subgroups.

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