Restrictive gun laws can protect children against suicide However, the laws do not protect them against gun-related murder Safe storage laws and mandatory waiting periods in particular were effective against suicide FRIDAY, July 12, 2024 (HealthDay News) -- Restrictive gun laws can decrease suicide rates among children and teenagers, but they don’t seem to lower their risk of being murdered, a new study says. States with laws requiring safe storage of firearms and mandatory waiting periods had lower suicide death rates among kids younger than 18, researchers report. However, no gun laws appeared to lower children’s risk of being murdered by a firearm, even those that prohibit access for people at risk of harming themselves and others, result show.

“It was surprising to me that no laws appear to be impacting the rates of homicide in children, not even safe access,” said lead researcher , an assistant professor of surgery and population health sciences at Duke University School of Medicine in Durham, N.C. “It’s sad and shocking.

” For the study, researchers analyzed data on more than 17,000 child firearm deaths that occurred between 2009 and 2020, including more than 6,700 suicides and more than 10,200 murders. They compared 36 different state-level firearm laws to see if any appeared to reduce or increase the risk of suicide or homicide for children. The analysis “suggests that we do actually have some laws that work,” Haines said in a news release.

“But the.