In
2022, the number of US gun suicides reached an all-time high: 73
people dying by gun suicide every day, or a total of nearly 27,000 deaths that
year. Despite years of intense debate over gun violence in the US, this central
fact still receives little attention: the majority of the country’s gun deaths
are suicides, not homicides.
Experts
say stigma and misinformation are still getting in the way of preventing more
of these deaths. Paul Nestadt, an
assistant professor of psychiatry at Johns Hopkins University, spoke to the
Guardian about the country’s rising number of suicides, the role of guns and
mental health – and what works to save lives. The conversation has been lightly
edited for length and clarity.
More
than half of this country’s 50,000 suicides per year are committed with guns.
What are some misconceptions about guns and suicide?
There’s this myth that suicide is this carefully considered
thing. But there’s been studies that look at the time between decision and
action, through interviews with suicide survivors. It’s impulsive. The vast
majority of people came to their decision about suicide, and attempted it the
same day. For
three-quarters of people, it’s within an hour. A quarter of them within five
minutes. People use what they have available. Lying in bed at two in the
morning, you reach for what you have in your bedside drawer. If that’s a bottle
of Tylenol, the survival rate is 98%, and the people who survive keep on
surviving.
Firearms,
however, have a 90% fatality rate. There’s not going to be a chance to get
help, get better, which is what most people do. That’s why having a firearm in
the house triples the risk of suicide. There’s even more of a correlation in
the case of young people. Kids don’t have as many other options.
When it comes to guns and suicide, a lot of Americans believe that
if someone wants to die by suicide, they will find a way to do it, so there’s
no point in trying to restrict access to firearms when people are at risk. Is
that true?
A
survey asked Americans: “If somebody was going to jump off the Golden Gate
Bridge and they were prevented, do you think they would find some other way to
do it?” About three-quarters said that most or all of the people who were
thwarted would find some other way. It’s a common belief. But it isn’t true.
There
was a large study of people who did try to jump off the Golden Gate Bridge.
Researchers were able to find 515 people who either survived the fall, or who
were physically pulled off the ledge. The researchers followed up with them for
26 years. Only 4.9% of those people went on to die by suicide. Ninety-five
percent – the vast majority – kept surviving. This speaks to the impulsivity of
suicide.
People
who have survived the Golden Gate Bridge fall and now talk about it, like Kevin
Hines, capture what it’s like: when you’re in the midst of that fall,
metaphorically or in reality, all of the problems you’re dealing with stop
seeming so important. That’s why it’s so important that the method people use
on the first suicide attempt isn’t so terribly lethal.
What are some ways to approach suicide prevention with firearms,
given that estimates show a quarter to a third of Americans own guns?
If
someone in the house is experiencing depression or has a substance use issue,
the gun might temporarily be stored outside the house. Firearm ranges, gun
shops and police stations – lots of people will let you temporarily store a gun
with them. In Maryland, they have a map you can find on a government website,
of people who have agreed to hold your gun for you in a crisis. Those
safe-storage maps are a great tool.
If
there’s a kid in the house, and there must be a gun, it really needs to be
stored safely, locking it up with ammunition stored separately.
There
are also red-flag laws, or extreme-risk protection orders. If you’re worried
about a family member or somebody who might be at risk who has access to a
firearm, depending on your state, a family member, the police or clinicians can
petition for the guns to be temporarily removed.
Is there evidence that any of these gun-suicide prevention
strategies work?
Just
about any law that reduces firearm access tends to demonstrate a reduction in
firearm suicide. One study from 2004 found that just passing child-access
prevention laws – which say that if there’s a kid in the house, you need to
keep any guns locked up – reduced suicide rates among teenagers by 8%.
There
was a really good study in 2017, looking at Connecticut’s extreme-risk
protection law, and it found that for every 10 or 11 guns seized by a risk
warrant, there was one life saved from firearm suicide. Another study found
that Indiana’s extreme-risk protection law reduced firearm suicide by 7.5% over
10 years, without any increase in other means of suicide.
That’s
pretty good. You wouldn’t want to use these laws if you didn’t have evidence
they worked, because you’re impacting someone’s constitutional right.
It
was really after the 2018 Parkland school shooting that many other states
started passing these laws, and the intent for most of the legislators was to
prevent mass shootings. There’s also been evidence that these laws work to
prevent mass shootings, but it’s in suicide that we really see their effects,
because the majority of gun deaths are suicides.
The
suicide rate in the US has risen in recent years. Are the demographics of who
is at risk changing?
White
Americans have had about twice the rate of suicide of Black, Latino or Asian
populations. Indigenous people also have a really high suicide rate. In 2021,
we saw the largest single-year increase in suicide in the general population
since the year 2000. And there was a 16% increase in Black suicide, by far the
largest increase in Black suicide we’ve ever seen. In particular, firearm
suicide in Black Americans skyrocketed. That’s what drove the entire increase.
What do we know about what might be driving the increase in gun
suicide?
I
think the simplest answer is: there are more guns in this country now. There
was a dramatic increase in firearm purchasing in 2020, starting in March, with
the pandemic. Firearm sales were record-breaking all through 2020 and 2021.
We’ve
seen spikes in gun purchasing in the past, like when Barack Obama was elected,
but those had tended to be people who already owned guns who were buying their
12th or 13th gun. The gun purchasers in 2020 and 2021 were much more new gun
owners. They were much more in blue states than in red states. Studies found
that more of these gun owners were Black, and more were living in urban
settings. It was a different kind of gun owner. And those were exactly the
populations that saw an increase in firearm suicide.
How significant a role does mental health play in gun suicide,
versus gun homicide?
Even
if we were to remove all firearm homicides that involve mental illness, that
would barely make a dent in firearm homicides in this country. Most gun deaths
are actually suicides. And about 90% of people who die by suicide have some
form of mental illness that contributed to their suicide deaths. About 1% to 5%
of people with depression per year will die by suicide. That’s approximately 1%
to 3% of the US population.
Substance
dependence adds a lot of risk. Ten percent of people with schizophrenia will
die by suicide, which is a lot. Also, people with anorexia or other eating
disorders have a very high suicide rate. People don’t often think of this, but
people with dementia and Parkinson’s have tremendously high suicide rates,
especially early in the diagnosis. It’s really something we have to pay
attention to.
Mass
shootings and other interpersonal violence are incredibly tragic, and very much
need to be focused on. But the things that we can to do prevent suicide deaths
with guns will potentially save the most lives.
This
is part of an ongoing interview series on the connections between mental health
and gun violence. Read the first installment on why it’s “misleading and
counterproductive” to blame mass shootings on mental health here.
...I support universal background checks for anyone purchasing a weapon and imposing a waiting period; I support increasing age limits for those purchasing a gun; I support banning high-capacity magazines and modifications on semi-automatic weapons; I support banning semi-automatic and fully automatic assault rifles; I support holding firearms manufacturers of assault rifles legally liable for gun violence; I support holding firearms manufacturers accountable for their perpetuation of fear through marketing specifically aimed at young male adults; I support red flag laws: legislation that will mandate prohibitions on concealed weapons and possession of firearms by people convicted of violent crimes and people who are considered a public threat; I support interventions where violence is imminent and the removal of all protective legal barriers for any person who has threatened violence; I support banning anyone from owning a weapon on no-fly or watch lists and for anyone taking prescriptions for psychotic and antisocial personality disorders and other psychological illnesses; I also support gun safety at home and keeping weapons away from children and teenagers...
ReplyDeleteFrom America and Guns by Glen Brown