Guns overtake cars as leading cause of death for US youth. ‘I just didn’t think it would occur so quickly’
2022/5/31
© The Mercury News
© The Mercury News
Family members who lost a sibling place flowers outside Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, on Wednesday, May 25, 2022.
- Wally Skalij/Los Angeles Times/TNS
For decades, the biggest threat kids faced growing up came from the automobiles they happily hopped into every day for a trip to school, the store or soccer practice.
Now, it’s gunfire.
As the country mourns its latest school shooting victims in Uvalde, Texas, it also has reached a grim milestone: Guns now kill more kids and teens in the U.S. than auto accidents do.
The trend has been building in recent years as automobile deaths have fallen with improved safety measures, while gun violence among the young has taken a growing toll. Figures from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention show that in 2020, the most recent year available, firearms passed motor vehicles as the leading killer of those ages 1-19.
“It was clear to me that it was just a matter of time,” said Dr. Lois Lee, a pediatric emergency medicine physician at Boston Children’s Hospital and an associate professor of pediatrics and emergency medicine at Harvard Medical School who has been studying the trend. “I just didn’t think it would occur so quickly.”
What’s spurred the violence? Experts point to many causes — the frustrations of entrenched poverty and discrimination, glorification of gun violence in popular culture and entertainment, and too-easy youth access to guns in many states like Texas — all kicked into overdrive by the stresses of the COVID-19 pandemic.
“We live in a society right now where gun violence is becoming increasingly tolerated,” said Rutgers University-Newark psychology professor Paul Boxer. “What I’ve seen locally, personally, it’s a lot of anxiety and depression.”
But Boxer cautioned the factors behind the rising youth gun violence are as varied as the patchwork of gun laws and socioeconomic circumstances across a politically divided country.
In a New England Journal of Medicine paper published last month, Lee noted that firearms overtook automobiles as the leading killer among those ages 1-24 in 2017, as gun violence became deadlier among older teens and young adults.
For children and adolescents age 1-17, motor vehicles remain the top killer, the CDC figures show, though guns are closing in.
Motor vehicle deaths among youth ages 1-19 fell from 7,885 in 2002 to 3,512 in 2019 before ticking up to 3,913 in 2020. U.S. gun deaths among kids and teens had hovered around 3,000 annually since 2000, reaching a low of 2,450 in 2013. But they have risen since, spiking to 4,357 in 2020.
“I don’t really understand what happened or why we’re starting to see that inflection point in 2014,” said Lee, who notes in a May 26 article in The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health that while motor vehicle fatalities of youth younger than 20 have fallen 51% since 2000, firearm deaths have risen 83% since 2013.
For decades, the biggest threat kids faced growing up came from the automobiles they happily hopped into every day for a trip to school, the store or soccer practice.
Now, it’s gunfire.
As the country mourns its latest school shooting victims in Uvalde, Texas, it also has reached a grim milestone: Guns now kill more kids and teens in the U.S. than auto accidents do.
The trend has been building in recent years as automobile deaths have fallen with improved safety measures, while gun violence among the young has taken a growing toll. Figures from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention show that in 2020, the most recent year available, firearms passed motor vehicles as the leading killer of those ages 1-19.
“It was clear to me that it was just a matter of time,” said Dr. Lois Lee, a pediatric emergency medicine physician at Boston Children’s Hospital and an associate professor of pediatrics and emergency medicine at Harvard Medical School who has been studying the trend. “I just didn’t think it would occur so quickly.”
What’s spurred the violence? Experts point to many causes — the frustrations of entrenched poverty and discrimination, glorification of gun violence in popular culture and entertainment, and too-easy youth access to guns in many states like Texas — all kicked into overdrive by the stresses of the COVID-19 pandemic.
“We live in a society right now where gun violence is becoming increasingly tolerated,” said Rutgers University-Newark psychology professor Paul Boxer. “What I’ve seen locally, personally, it’s a lot of anxiety and depression.”
But Boxer cautioned the factors behind the rising youth gun violence are as varied as the patchwork of gun laws and socioeconomic circumstances across a politically divided country.
In a New England Journal of Medicine paper published last month, Lee noted that firearms overtook automobiles as the leading killer among those ages 1-24 in 2017, as gun violence became deadlier among older teens and young adults.
For children and adolescents age 1-17, motor vehicles remain the top killer, the CDC figures show, though guns are closing in.
Motor vehicle deaths among youth ages 1-19 fell from 7,885 in 2002 to 3,512 in 2019 before ticking up to 3,913 in 2020. U.S. gun deaths among kids and teens had hovered around 3,000 annually since 2000, reaching a low of 2,450 in 2013. But they have risen since, spiking to 4,357 in 2020.
“I don’t really understand what happened or why we’re starting to see that inflection point in 2014,” said Lee, who notes in a May 26 article in The Lancet Child & Adolescent Health that while motor vehicle fatalities of youth younger than 20 have fallen 51% since 2000, firearm deaths have risen 83% since 2013.
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