State Intimate Partner Violence-Related Firearm Laws and Intimate Partner Homicide Rates in the United States, 1991 to 2015.

dc.contributor.author

Díez, Carolina

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Kurland, Rachel P

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Rothman, Emily F

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Bair-Merritt, Megan

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Fleegler, Eric

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Xuan, Ziming

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Galea, Sandro

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Ross, Craig S

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Kalesan, Bindu

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Goss, Kristin A

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Siegel, Michael

dc.date.accessioned

2022-10-01T13:45:03Z

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2022-10-01T13:45:03Z

dc.date.issued

2017-10

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2022-10-01T13:45:03Z

dc.description.abstract

Background

To prevent intimate partner homicide (IPH), some states have adopted laws restricting firearm possession by intimate partner violence (IPV) offenders. "Possession" laws prohibit the possession of firearms by these offenders. "Relinquishment" laws prohibit firearm possession and also explicitly require offenders to surrender their firearms. Few studies have assessed the effect of these policies.

Objective

To study the association between state IPV-related firearm laws and IPH rates over a 25-year period (1991 to 2015).

Design

Panel study.

Setting

United States, 1991 to 2015.

Participants

Homicides committed by intimate partners, as identified in the Federal Bureau of Investigation's Uniform Crime Reports, Supplementary Homicide Reports.

Measurements

IPV-related firearm laws (predictor) and annual, state-specific, total, and firearm-related IPH rates (outcome).

Results

State laws that prohibit persons subject to IPV-related restraining orders from possessing firearms and also require them to relinquish firearms in their possession were associated with 9.7% lower total IPH rates (95% CI, 3.4% to 15.5% reduction) and 14.0% lower firearm-related IPH rates (CI, 5.1% to 22.0% reduction) than in states without these laws. Laws that did not explicitly require relinquishment of firearms were associated with a non-statistically significant 6.6% reduction in IPH rates.

Limitations

The model did not control for variation in implementation of the laws. Causal interpretation is limited by the observational and ecological nature of the analysis.

Conclusion

Our findings suggest that state laws restricting firearm possession by persons deemed to be at risk for perpetrating intimate partner abuse may save lives. Laws requiring at-risk persons to surrender firearms already in their possession were associated with lower IPH rates.

Primary funding source

Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.
dc.identifier

2654047

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0003-4819

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1539-3704

dc.identifier.uri

https://hdl.handle.net/10161/25922

dc.language

eng

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American College of Physicians

dc.relation.ispartof

Annals of internal medicine

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10.7326/m16-2849

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Humans

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Wounds, Gunshot

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Homicide

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Firearms

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United States

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Intimate Partner Violence

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State Intimate Partner Violence-Related Firearm Laws and Intimate Partner Homicide Rates in the United States, 1991 to 2015.

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Journal article

pubs.begin-page

536

pubs.end-page

543

pubs.issue

8

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Duke

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Sanford School of Public Policy

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Trinity College of Arts & Sciences

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Political Science

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Law School

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Law School - Secondary Group

pubs.publication-status

Published

pubs.volume

167

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