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Journal Article

Citation

Lavoie M, Cardinal L, Chapdelaine A, St-Laurent D. Chronic Dis. Can. 2001; 22(1): 24-29.

Affiliation

Direction de la santé publique de Québec, 2400 d'Estimauville, Beauport, Qué G1E 7G9, Canada. lavoie.michel@ssss.gouv.qc.ca

Copyright

(Copyright © 2001, Health and Welfare Canada)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

11397347

Abstract

This survey on the storage of household firearms in Quebec was conducted in 1994. At that time, 35% (175/504) of survey participants who kept long guns in their homes had failed to comply with Canadian firearm storage regulations. In most cases (85%; n=149), this was because at least one stored long gun was found to be both operable and accessible. Thirty-seven per cent of participants stated that no one, including themselves, had used their firearm(s) in the 12 months preceding the survey. These findings point to two possible ways of dealing with long guns kept in the home: render these weapons inoperable or inaccessible, which would increase the level of compliance with the regulations, and dispose of those no longer in use. The results of this survey have never been published before, and constitute the only information of this kind with respect to Quebec.

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