Home Contact Us Site Map
Search for:
Classes & Programs WebNursery
Health Info Find a Job Find a Physician
About St. John's Mercy
St. John's Mercy Medical Center - St. Louis
St. John's Mercy Hospital
Services and Specialties
Information for Patients
For Health Professionals
St. John's Mercy Medical Group
St. John's Mercy Affiliated Physicians
St. John's Mercy Health Services
St. John's Mercy Quality
Foundation
E-mail a Patient
Privacy Statement
Vendor Resources
 
Home > Health Information > Children's Health > Safety  Printer Friendly Page Printable Version

Firearms - Injury Statistics and Incidence Rates

The following statistics were are the latest available from the National SAFE KIDS Campaign:

Injury and death rates:

  • Approximately 1,400 children ages 14 and under are treated annually in hospital emergency rooms for unintentional firearm-related injuries.

  • In 2000, 88 children ages 14 and under died from unintentional firearm-related injuries; more than half of those children were between the ages of 10 and 14.

  • Non-powder gun-related injuries (for example, BB guns or pellet guns) sent nearly 8,000 children in one year to hospital emergency rooms for treatment.

Where and when:

  • Most unintentional firearm-related deaths among children occur in or around the home; 50 percent at the home of the victim, and 40 percent at the home of a friend or relative.

  • The presence of a firearm in the home increases the risk of unintentional firearm-related death among children (especially if the firearm is loaded and kept unlocked).

  • Most unintentional firearm-related child deaths involve guns that were loaded and accessible, and occur when children play with the gun.

  • More than one-half of firearm owners keep their firearms loaded and ready for use some of the time.

  • Most unintentional shootings among children occur in the late afternoon, on the weekend, during summer months, and during the holiday season, when children are most likely to be unsupervised.

  • Rural areas have higher incidences of unintentional firearm-related injuries, as well as higher rates of firearm ownership.

Who:

  • Approximately 3.3 million children in the US live in households with firearms that are, at times, kept loaded and unlocked.

  • Boys are more likely to suffer unintentional firearm-injuries or die from an unintentional shooting than girls. Nearly 80 percent of children ages 14 and under who die from unintentional shootings are boys.

  • As many as 75 percent to 80 percent of first and second graders know where their parents' gun is kept.

  • Some 3-year-olds are strong enough to pull the trigger of many handguns.

Click here to view the
Online Resources page of this Web.

Find A Doctor
Pediatrics - General

Departments and Services
Children's Services

Topic Content
Site Index

Motor Vehicle Safety

Fire Safety and Burns

Bicycle/In-line Skating/Skateboarding Safety

Toy Safety

Airway Obstruction

Water Safety

Sports Safety

Falls

Firearms

Glossary

Online Resources

A member of the
Sisters of Mercy Health System