Clinical strategies for reducing firearm suicide

Abstract Suicide is complex, with psychiatric, cultural, and socioeconomic roots. Though mental illnesses like depression contribute to risk for suicide, access to lethal means such as firearms is considered a key risk factor for suicide, and half of suicides in the USA are by firearm. When a person...

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Main Authors: Rocco Pallin, Amy Barnhorst
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-10-01
Series:Injury Epidemiology
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s40621-021-00352-8
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spelling doaj-f2684f62985b4ad78142abd93b83e6a92021-10-10T11:37:26ZengBMCInjury Epidemiology2197-17142021-10-018111010.1186/s40621-021-00352-8Clinical strategies for reducing firearm suicideRocco Pallin0Amy Barnhorst1University of California Firearm Violence Research Center at UC DavisUniversity of California Firearm Violence Research Center at UC DavisAbstract Suicide is complex, with psychiatric, cultural, and socioeconomic roots. Though mental illnesses like depression contribute to risk for suicide, access to lethal means such as firearms is considered a key risk factor for suicide, and half of suicides in the USA are by firearm. When a person at risk of suicide has access to firearms, clinicians have a range of options for intervention. Depending on the patient, the situation, and the access to firearms, counseling on storage practices, temporary transfer of firearms, or further intervention may be appropriate. In the USA, ownership of and access to firearms are common and discussing added risk of access to firearms for those at risk of suicide is not universally practiced. Given the burden of suicide (particularly by firearm) in the USA, the prevalence of firearm access, and the lethality of suicide attempts with firearms, we present the existing evidence on the burden of firearm suicide and what clinicians can do to reduce their patients’ risk. Specifically, we review firearm ownership in the USA, firearm injury epidemiology, risk factors for firearm-related harm, and available interventions to reduce patients’ risk of firearm injury and death.https://doi.org/10.1186/s40621-021-00352-8Firearm violenceClinical interventionsFirearm storageFirearm suicidePreventionLethal means safety
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rocco Pallin
Amy Barnhorst
spellingShingle Rocco Pallin
Amy Barnhorst
Clinical strategies for reducing firearm suicide
Injury Epidemiology
Firearm violence
Clinical interventions
Firearm storage
Firearm suicide
Prevention
Lethal means safety
author_facet Rocco Pallin
Amy Barnhorst
author_sort Rocco Pallin
title Clinical strategies for reducing firearm suicide
title_short Clinical strategies for reducing firearm suicide
title_full Clinical strategies for reducing firearm suicide
title_fullStr Clinical strategies for reducing firearm suicide
title_full_unstemmed Clinical strategies for reducing firearm suicide
title_sort clinical strategies for reducing firearm suicide
publisher BMC
series Injury Epidemiology
issn 2197-1714
publishDate 2021-10-01
description Abstract Suicide is complex, with psychiatric, cultural, and socioeconomic roots. Though mental illnesses like depression contribute to risk for suicide, access to lethal means such as firearms is considered a key risk factor for suicide, and half of suicides in the USA are by firearm. When a person at risk of suicide has access to firearms, clinicians have a range of options for intervention. Depending on the patient, the situation, and the access to firearms, counseling on storage practices, temporary transfer of firearms, or further intervention may be appropriate. In the USA, ownership of and access to firearms are common and discussing added risk of access to firearms for those at risk of suicide is not universally practiced. Given the burden of suicide (particularly by firearm) in the USA, the prevalence of firearm access, and the lethality of suicide attempts with firearms, we present the existing evidence on the burden of firearm suicide and what clinicians can do to reduce their patients’ risk. Specifically, we review firearm ownership in the USA, firearm injury epidemiology, risk factors for firearm-related harm, and available interventions to reduce patients’ risk of firearm injury and death.
topic Firearm violence
Clinical interventions
Firearm storage
Firearm suicide
Prevention
Lethal means safety
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s40621-021-00352-8
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