Public health researchers across the U.S. are eager to find possible solutions to gun violence. Gun ownership data helps researchers study how guns are used in various crimes and could reveal opportunities for preventing firearm-related deaths. But there is no federal registration requirement for guns. And without concrete numbers of gun ownership, how can researchers pin down the problem?The answer: They use alternative measurements to get a handle on the data.
Why There Isn’t Official Data On Gun Ownership
There isn’t any official data on gun ownership in the U.S. That’s because it’s illegal to keep track of who owns what gun. The Firearm Owners Protection Act of 1986 prevents the federal government or a state from keeping a registry of the guns a person owns.So instead, researchers go looking for other solutions.Some research groups have surveyed people, asking if a household has at least one gun, but surveys rely heavily on people willingly giving out their information. Dr. Phil Cook, a professor at Duke University, has been studying gun statistics for decades. He says you have to take survey data “with several grains of salt”.“It’s very hard to get people to talk to you about whether they have a gun in the house,” Cook said, “so survey data tend to be inaccurate.”Survey measures are also not readily available each year, which makes it hard to calculate a yearly estimate.The National Instant Criminal Background Check System (NICS) releases data on how many background checks it ran that year. Some news outlets use this data to understand gun sales, but even there, that data is problematic. According to Cook, if you wanted to use that data to understand gun ownership, it would be related, but he doubts it would say anything about what we really want to know, which is how many households possess at least one gun.“Just the nature of what we’ve seen, especially recently, on gun sales is that it’s a relatively small group of gun owners who are in the market all the time,” Cook explained. He says most gun owners are like him: “I once bought a gun 25 years ago and that was it.”So, Cook decided the research community needed a better proxy measurement than either survey or background check data.
The Most Precise Proxy
In 1979, Cook was looking at official data on firearm deaths. He used WISQARS, an online database created by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) that provides fatal and nonfatal injury and violent death data.For example, if someone dies in a car accident or is killed by gunshot, a death certificate would be created with information on how that person died. Physicians, medical examiners, and coroners report this information into the WISQARS system. For any kind of comprehensive data analysis, Cook would need readily available, high-quality data and he found it in WISQARS.“Then the question is: what to do with it? Is there anything in there that will tell us what we care about, which is the percentage of households that have a gun?” Cook asked.Cook said this data, on face value, just reflected how much violence was in a particular jurisdiction, but he wanted to focus on the method a person would use if they wanted to be violent.Cook assumed that if people wanted to commit violence against others or themselves, they would use whatever was available. One piece of evidence that supported his assumption was that the gun ownership percentages for homicides and suicides were highly correlated across states.“So, the two percentages — gun percent in homicide and gun percent in suicide — seemed to be reflecting the same underlying phenomenon,” said Cook. “That phenomenon, I believed, was gun availability.”Cook took it further. He asked himself: If a state had a high suicide by firearm rate, could that be correlated with a high gun ownership rate?He divided the number of firearm suicides by the total number of suicides in a given year. He called that the FS/S. This formula gave him the rate of suicides by firearm in a given year for a given state.