Journal / To Continue…

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us states with more gun owners have more murders wed dec 4,11:10 am et add health – reuters to my yahoo!

by charnicia e. huggins

new york (reuters health) – homicides in the united states are more common in states where more households own guns, according to researchers.

the study findings imply “”that guns, on balance, lethally imperil rather than protect americans,”” lead study author dr. matthew miller of harvard school of public health in boston, massachusetts, told reuters health.

“”this inference is consistent with previous…studies that have found that the presence of a gun in the home is a risk factor for homicide, and starkly at odds with the unsubstantiated, yet often adduced, notion that guns are a public good,”” he added.

miller and his team investigated the association between homicide and rates of household firearm ownership using 1988-1997 data collected from the nine us census regions and the 50 states.

they found that household gun ownership was linked to homicide rates throughout the nine census regions. at the state level, the link between rates of gun ownership and murder existed for all homicide victims older than age 5, according to the report in the december issue of the american journal of public health.

in fact, the six states with the highest rates of gun ownership–louisiana, alabama, mississippi, wyoming, west virginia and arkansas–had more than 21,000 homicides, nearly three times as many as the four states with the lowest rates of gun ownership–hawaii, massachusetts, rhode island and new jersey.

further, people who lived in one of the six “”high gun states”” were nearly three times as likely to die from any homicide and more than four times as likely to die from gun-related homicide than those who lived in “”low gun states,”” the report indicates. their risk of dying in a non-gun-related homicide was also nearly double that of those who lived in states with the lowest rates of gun ownership.

on average, about half of households in high gun states had firearms, according to data reported by three of the six states, in comparison to 13% of households in low-gun states.