Affiliation:
1. Department of Health Sciences, Bouvé College of Health Sciences, Northeastern University, Boston, Massachusetts
2. Department of Health Policy, Stanford School of Medicine, Stanford, California
3. Stanford Law School, Stanford, California
4. Department of Epidemiology, University of Pittsburgh School of Public Health, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
Abstract
ImportanceExtreme risk protection orders (ERPOs)—also known as red flag, risk warrant, and gun violence restraining orders—authorize law enforcement, family members, and sometimes others to petition a court to remove firearms from and prevent the acquisition of new firearms by a person judged to pose an immediate danger to themselves or others. Previous estimates suggest that 1 suicide is prevented for every 10 ERPOs issued, a number needed to treat that depends critically on the counterfactual estimate of the proportion of suicidal acts by ERPO respondents that would have involved firearms in the absence of ERPOs.ObjectiveTo empirically inform updated estimates of the number of ERPOs needed to prevent 1 suicide.Design, Setting, and ParticipantsThis cohort study used data from California for method-specific suicides by handgun ownership (October 18, 2004, to December 31, 2015). Handgun-owning suicide decedents in California were identified using individual-level registry data about lawful handgun ownership linked to cause-specific mortality for a cohort of more than 25 million adults. The study also used data from Connecticut for method-specific suicides among ERPO respondents who died by suicide, extracted from published data (October 1999 to June 2013). Data analysis was performed in December 2023.ExposureHandgun ownership.Main Outcomes and MeasuresThe primary outcomes were the number and distribution of suicidal acts by handgun owners in California, estimated using method-specific suicide mortality data and published case fatality ratios, and the counterfactual number and distribution of suicidal acts and deaths among ERPO respondents in Connecticut had no ERPOs been issued.ResultsA total of 1216 handgun owners (mean [SD] age, 50 [18] years; 1019 male [83.8%]) died by suicide during the study period. Among male handgun owners in California, 28% of suicidal acts involved firearms, 54% involved drug poisoning, 9% involved cutting or piercing, 3% involved hanging or suffocation, 2% involved poisoning with solids and/or liquids, and the remaining 4% involved other methods. Assuming this distribution approximates the counterfactual distribution among ERPO respondents in Connecticut in the absence of ERPOs, 1 suicide death was prevented for every 22 ERPOs issued.Conclusions and RelevanceThe estimates produced by this cohort study of California handgun owners suggest that ERPOs can play an important role in averting deaths among high-risk individuals.
Publisher
American Medical Association (AMA)
Cited by
2 articles.
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