Children in the most rural areas of the US are as likely to die by gunshot as kids in the biggest cities, a new analysis of nearly 24,000 deaths finds.
Not surprisingly, murders involving firearms are more common among city youth. But gun suicides and accidental fatal shootings are more common among rural children.
“This debunks the myth that firearm death is a big-city problem,” said lead author Michael Nance of Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia.
“This is everybody’s problem,” he said.
The findings were published yesterday in the journal Pediatrics.
The researchers analyzed data from nearly 24,000 gun-related deaths among children aged 19 and younger from 1999 through 2006.
That included about 15,000 homicides, 7,000 suicides and 1,400 accidental shootings for the eight-year period.
The researchers sorted them by county then compared gun death rates for the most urban counties — those with populations of 1 million or more, like Dallas County in Texas — and the most rural counties — the ones far from cities or with fewer than 2,500 people, like Powder River County in Montana.
They found essentially the same rate, about 4 deaths per 100,000 children.
A previous analysis of adult deaths found similar patterns.
The new findings add important information to what’s known about guns and children, said Elizabeth Powell of Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine, who has conducted research into firearms in Chicago, but was not involved in the new study.
“Prevention strategies need to be targeted to youth in rural areas as well as urban areas,” Powell said.
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