Sunday, November 11, 2018
Bullets and American Teens
The
spike in gun sales after any major serial killing continues to stun me. The
NRA-right-wing mantra “the only way to stop a bad guy with a gun is a good guy
with a gun” is so completely statistically out of whack as to be ludicrous… but
it is a sacred belief to NRA adherents. That for every justifiable gun homicide
there are 30 that are not seems to fall on deaf ears. That how to detect when a
“good guy” might become a “bad guy” or that guns are so pervasive that even the
“worst guy” can find a sophisticated multi-shot gun are matters without
answers. That there is no reason to own semi-automatic assault weapons with
oversized magazines except to kill a significant volume of human beings in the
shortest time possible draws nothing more than a “damn you liberal” yawn from
NRA supporters.
We
see hate groups with members with “open carry” weapons strapped to their waists
in states that permit such inane bravado. It’s bad when religious and ethnic
killing mirror WWII Nazi executions, but apparently, we have equal disdain when
it comes to watching as our children die from gun violence that increasingly
defines life in inner city America. When schools or children are sprayed by a
mass-killer’s bullets, from Sandy Hook to Columbine to Parkland, that NRA
fanatics believe more guns in schools, in the hands of teachers, are a
realistic solution is an amazing act of denial of statistical reality.
According to the NRA, there are over 15 million AR-15 semi-automatic rifles in
civilian hands in this country. Cops are facing increasingly sophisticated
weapons as they respond to a growing litany of assaults. Still, there is a
right-wing cry for more guns in civilian hands.
The
October 30th Los Angeles Times presents some pretty stark statistics
that migrate beyond mass killings to guns deaths against American children in
general: You can see the toll of gun
violence on America’s kids by studying hospital records from around the
country. And when you do, you’ll see that it’s large — and it appears to be
rising… [R]esearchers from the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine…
published their results Monday [10/29] in the journal JAMA Pediatrics.
Faiz Gani and Joseph Canner of the
school’s Surgery Center for Outcomes Research scoured data from the Nationwide
Emergency Department Sample, the largest database of hospital emergency-room
visits across the country…They tallied more than 75,000 children who were sent
to ERs seeking treatment for gun-related injuries between the beginning of 2006
and the end of 2014… Then they adjusted the data to make it representative of
the nation as a whole.
Gani and Canner found that for every
100,000 Americans under the age of 18, 11.3 went to a hospital emergency room
after being shot. This figure represents the average incidence of
firearm-related ER visits over the nine years of the study.
The average age of these gunshot
victims was 14.8 years, and the overwhelming majority — 86.2% — were
male…Overall, 6% of pediatric shooting victims who came to the ER died of their
injuries, the researchers found… Nearly half — 49% — of the young patients
brought to hospital emergency departments with gun-related injuries were shot
during intentional assaults. Another 39% of patients were victims of accidents
involving firearms, and 2% attempted suicide with a gun.
American kids faced the highest risk
of a serious firearm injury at the start of the study period, with 15.1 out of
every 100,000 minors seeking ER treatment for a gunshot wound in 2006. That
figure fell steadily until 2011, when 9.5 out of every 100,000 minors went to
the ER after being shot.
After rising slightly in 2012, the
incidence of gun-related trips to the emergency room bottomed out in 2013 at
7.5 cases per 100,000 kids. It then jumped back to 10.1 cases per 100,000 in
2014.
This trend was most pronounced for
boys. Throughout the study period, boys were at least five times more likely
than girls to require emergency-room treatment for a gun-inflicted wound.
The incidence of these injuries among
boys was 26.1 per 100,000 in 2006, then fell to 12.3 per 100,000 in 2013 before
rising back to 16.5 per 100,000 in 2014. The incidence for girls remained
between 2.4 and 4 cases per 100,000 throughout the nine years of the study.
The group that experienced the
greatest burden of gun-related injuries was young men ages 15 to 17. For this
unfortunate cohort, 85.9 out of every 100,000 were taken to an emergency room
to be treated for a gunshot wound.
Among all minors seen in ERs with
firearm-related injuries, 35% were hurt badly enough to be admitted to the
hospital. About 1 out of 15 of these admitted patients — or 6.6% — died as a
result of their injuries… In addition, 3.6% of the kids who came to the ER
after being shot died before they could be admitted, the researchers found.
The cost of treating all these
children in the emergency department totaled $259 million over the nine years
of the study. Those who required further treatment as inpatients racked up a
whopping $2.2 billion in hospital bills… In other words, the overall cost of
caring for kids who had been shot was about $270 million per year, on average.
Costs?
If that’s all you care about. We lose untold hundreds of millions if not
billions of dollars in global tourism because we are looked upon, with
justification, as a gun-crazy nation, saturated with over three hundred million
guns in civilian hands, and an attitude that all-too-often places gun ownership
as more important than keeping our children safe. But the human cost is so much
more than dollars. That we are alone among nations, not gripped by war or civil
war, with these deadly statistics hasn’t moved the political needle towards gun
control. And our increasingly very-right-wing-shifting Supreme Court is likely
to amp up that killing trend with attacks on even the most sensible gun
control.
I’m Peter Dekom, and common sense
seems so very uncommon in this country when it comes to protecting our own
children from gun violence.
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