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Journal Article

Citation

Betz ME, Stanley IH, Buck-Atkinson J, Johnson R, Bryan CJ, Baker JC, Bryan ABO, Hunter K, Anestis MD. Ann. Intern Med. 2023; ePub(ePub): ePub.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2023, American College of Physicians)

DOI

10.7326/M22-3113

PMID

36745884

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Secure home storage of firearms may reduce suicide and injury risk (1). Providing locking devices may increase secure firearm storage practices (2-4), but questions remain about which devices motivate secure storage.

Objective: To describe preferences about personal firearm locking devices among firearm-owning adults living in the United States.

Methods: We hired the Ipsos research firm for a brief (8-minute) online survey (28 July to 8 August 2022). Ipsos drew a sample from its KnowledgePanel, a probability-based, nationally representative, online panel of English-speaking, noninstitutionalized adults (aged ≥18 years) described elsewhere (5). Eligible survey participants were U.S. adults owning at least 1 firearm, excluding active-duty military personnel. Participants received incentives through KnowledgePanel; the Colorado Multiple Institutional Review Board approved study procedures.

Questions, accompanied by device photos, examined relative preferences for various firearm locking devices (Supplement). KnowledgePanel data included demographic and household characteristics.

Descriptive analyses (weighted proportions with 95% CIs) were computed using the weighting variable provided by Ipsos and weighting commands in R, version 4.2.0 (R Foundation), using the survey package. Ipsos adjusts survey weights after sampling through iterative proportional fitting to minimize nonresponse bias and ensure that the sample is nationally representative. Study-specific poststratification weights adjusted for nonresponse, demographic distributions (from the American Community Survey or Current Population Survey), and KnowledgePanel benchmarks for adult gun owners.

Findings: Among 4081 firearm owners invited, 2152 completed the survey (53% participation) (Table). Respondents mostly identified as non-Hispanic White (75.6% [95% CI, 73.3% to 77.8%]) and male (66.7% [CI, 64.3% to 69.0%]). Most (64.8% [CI, 62.5% to 67.1%]) owned both handguns (mean, 3.7 handguns) and long guns (mean, 4.5 long guns). Most participants (70.8% [CI, 68.7% to 72.9%]) used at least 1 form of storage or locking device for at least 1 firearm; 65.3% (CI, 62.9% to 67.5%) had 1 or more unlocked firearms...


Language: en

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