Drizzt
Member
Firearm legislation reform in the European Union: impact on firearm availability, firearm suicide and homicide rates in Austria
Nestor D. Kapusta, MD
Department of Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy and Institute for Medical Psychology, Medical University of Vienna, Austria
Elmar Etzersdorfer, MD
Furtbach Hospital for Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Stuttgart, Germany
Christoph Krall, PhD
Section of Medical Statistics, Medical University of Vienna, Austria
Gernot Sonneck, MD
Institute for Medical Psychology, Medical University of Vienna, Austria
Correspondence: Dr Nestor D. Kapusta, Medical University of Vienna, Department of Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy, Waehringer Guertel 18–20, A-1090 Vienna, Austria. Tel: +43 1 40400 3064; fax: +43 1 4277 9656; email: [email protected]
Declaration of interest None.
Background The availability of firearms in homes and at aggregate levels is a risk factor for suicide and homicide. One method of reducing access to suicidal means is the restriction of firearm availability through more stringent legislation.
Aims To evaluate the impact of firearm legislation reform on firearm suicides and homicides as well as on the availability of firearms in Austria.
Method Official statistics on suicides, firearm homicides and firearm licences issued from 1985 to 2005 were examined. To assess the effect of the new firearm law, enacted in 1997, linear regression and Poisson regressions were performed using data from before and after the law reform.
Results The rate of firearm suicides among some age groups, percentage of firearm suicides, as well as the rate of firearm homicides and the rate of firearm licences, significantly decreased after a more stringent firearm law had been implemented.
Conclusions Our findings provide evidence that the introduction of restrictive firearm legislation effectively reduced the rates of firearm suicide and homicide. The decline in firearm-related deaths seems to have been mediated by the legal restriction of firearm availability. Restrictive firearm legislation should be an integral part of national suicide prevention programmes in countries with high firearm suicide rates.
http://bjp.rcpsych.org/cgi/content/abstract/191/3/253
Any decent researcher would blow this out of the water in half a second, simply because they do not look at whether the overall rate of suicides dropped, only that of firearm suicides. If the overall rate does not drop, then you still have no net effect.
:banghead:
Nestor D. Kapusta, MD
Department of Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy and Institute for Medical Psychology, Medical University of Vienna, Austria
Elmar Etzersdorfer, MD
Furtbach Hospital for Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Stuttgart, Germany
Christoph Krall, PhD
Section of Medical Statistics, Medical University of Vienna, Austria
Gernot Sonneck, MD
Institute for Medical Psychology, Medical University of Vienna, Austria
Correspondence: Dr Nestor D. Kapusta, Medical University of Vienna, Department of Psychoanalysis and Psychotherapy, Waehringer Guertel 18–20, A-1090 Vienna, Austria. Tel: +43 1 40400 3064; fax: +43 1 4277 9656; email: [email protected]
Declaration of interest None.
Background The availability of firearms in homes and at aggregate levels is a risk factor for suicide and homicide. One method of reducing access to suicidal means is the restriction of firearm availability through more stringent legislation.
Aims To evaluate the impact of firearm legislation reform on firearm suicides and homicides as well as on the availability of firearms in Austria.
Method Official statistics on suicides, firearm homicides and firearm licences issued from 1985 to 2005 were examined. To assess the effect of the new firearm law, enacted in 1997, linear regression and Poisson regressions were performed using data from before and after the law reform.
Results The rate of firearm suicides among some age groups, percentage of firearm suicides, as well as the rate of firearm homicides and the rate of firearm licences, significantly decreased after a more stringent firearm law had been implemented.
Conclusions Our findings provide evidence that the introduction of restrictive firearm legislation effectively reduced the rates of firearm suicide and homicide. The decline in firearm-related deaths seems to have been mediated by the legal restriction of firearm availability. Restrictive firearm legislation should be an integral part of national suicide prevention programmes in countries with high firearm suicide rates.
http://bjp.rcpsych.org/cgi/content/abstract/191/3/253
Any decent researcher would blow this out of the water in half a second, simply because they do not look at whether the overall rate of suicides dropped, only that of firearm suicides. If the overall rate does not drop, then you still have no net effect.
:banghead: