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Teens say they can access firearms at home, even when parents lock them up, new research shows

Teens say they can access firearms at home, even when parents lock them up, new research shows

  • A study published in JAMA Network Open found that more than half of U.S. teens living in households with firearms believe they can access and load a firearm at home, even when parents report storing all firearms locked and unloaded.
  • Most households with firearms have multiple guns, and owners often don’t secure all of them, making it easier for teens to access firearms.
  • The study found that parents’ storage practices alone were not a reliable predictor of whether teens believed they could access a firearm, highlighting the need for more effective messaging and safety strategies.
  • Encouraging parents to treat every firearm in the household as a potential source of risk, talking with teens about conflict resolution and mental health, and implementing universal laws requiring secure storage of all firearms may be protective measures against teen firearm access.
  • Further research is needed to explore how teens’ perceptions of their access to firearms at home vary depending on cultural backgrounds, geography, and household attitudes towards firearm use, as well as the impact of these factors on actual firearm access among younger children in firearm-owning households.

Most households that own firearms have more than one − and owners often don't secure all of them. StockPlanets/E+ via Getty Images

More than half of U.S. teens living in households with firearms believe they can access and load a firearm at home. Even when their parents report storing all firearms locked and unloaded, more than one-third of teens still believe they could access and load one. These are the main findings of our new study, published in the journal JAMA Network Open.

We are behavioral scientists investigating youth injury prevention and youth safety. In this study, we analyzed national survey data from nearly 500 parents who owned firearms and their teens. One survey asked the parents to report how many firearms they had in the home and how they stored each one. Another asked their teens to estimate how quickly they could access and load a firearm at home.

While the presence of unlocked and loaded firearms in the home was weakly linked to perceived access among teens, we found that parents’ storage practices alone were a poor predictor of whether teens believed they could access a firearm. What’s more, in households with more than one firearm, locking up more firearms was not at all linked to perceived access among teens if at least one remained unsecured.

In short, just one unlocked firearm can undo the protective benefit of securing all other firearms in the home, our results showed.

Why it matters

In the U.S., firearms are now the leading cause of death among children and teens. In most of these cases, the firearm used belonged to a parent, relative or friend.

Our study focused on teens’ beliefs about firearm access, not their actual access. However, these perceptions may provide important clues around firearm access and use. Prior research shows that teens who believe they can access a firearm are more likely to access and carry one. This is particularly concerning for teens who already have a higher risk for dying by suicide.

One of the most widely supported ways to reduce teen injuries and deaths by firearms is to encourage owners to keep firearms locked and unloaded. However, most firearm-owning households in the U.S. have multiple firearms, and owners often store some firearms securely but not all.

Steel Gun Safe And Metal Storage Cabinet

Firearms are the leading cause of death among children and teens.
Kypros/Stock Photos Gun Safe via Getty Images

Despite evidence that securely storing firearms saves lives, efforts to promote that messaging may be less effective when it is not universally applied to all firearms in the home or when teens still know how to access them.

Our study also points to the need for messaging and safety strategies that consider teen behavior amid household firearm dynamics. For example, teens may observe where firearms are stored or know where keys or combinations are kept and unlock firearms in moments of impulsivity or emotional distress. Beyond securely storing firearms, encouraging parents to treat every firearm in the household as a potential source of risk and talking with teens about how to address conflicts and promote mental and emotional well-being may also be protective.

Additionally, our study adds support for universal laws that require securely storing all firearms in homes in which children live and mandating routine assessments of teen firearm access by pediatricians.

What still isn’t known

It is still unclear how teens’ beliefs about their access to firearms affects whether they actually seek them out – or how the variability of parents’ practices on storing firearms affects teen access.

Another important question is how teens’ perceptions of their access to firearms at home may vary depending on cultural backgrounds, geography and different households’ attitudes and beliefs around firearm use.

Additionally, our study looked only at teens ages 14 to 18. Further research is needed to explore these associations among younger children in firearm-owning households.

The Research Brief is a short take on interesting academic work.

The Conversation

Rebeccah Sokol receives funding from the National Institutes of Health and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Katherine G. Hastings does not work for, consult, own shares in or receive funding from any company or organization that would benefit from this article, and has disclosed no relevant affiliations beyond their academic appointment.

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Q. What percentage of U.S. teens living in households with firearms believe they can access and load a firearm at home?
A. More than half of U.S. teens living in households with firearms believe they can access and load a firearm at home.

Q. How many parents reported storing all firearms locked and unloaded, but more than one-third of teens still believed they could access and load a firearm?
A. One-third of teens still believed they could access and load a firearm even when their parents reported storing all firearms locked and unloaded.

Q. What was the main finding of the study regarding parents’ storage practices and teen access to firearms?
A. Parents’ storage practices alone were a poor predictor of whether teens believed they could access a firearm, and locking up more firearms did not necessarily reduce perceived access among teens if at least one remained unsecured.

Q. How does the presence of unlocked and loaded firearms in the home affect teens’ perceptions of their access to firearms?
A. The presence of unlocked and loaded firearms in the home was weakly linked to perceived access among teens, but this effect was not strong enough to undo the protective benefit of securing all other firearms in the home.

Q. What is one way to reduce teen injuries and deaths by firearms, according to the study?
A. Encouraging owners to keep firearms locked and unloaded is one widely supported way to reduce teen injuries and deaths by firearms.

Q. Why are efforts to promote securely storing firearms less effective when it comes to teens who still know how to access them?
A. Efforts to promote securely storing firearms may be less effective when it is not universally applied to all firearms in the home or when teens still know how to access them, even if their parents have secured other firearms.

Q. What additional strategies can help reduce teen injuries and deaths by firearms, according to the study?
A. Encouraging parents to treat every firearm in the household as a potential source of risk, talking with teens about conflicts and promoting mental and emotional well-being, and mandating routine assessments of teen firearm access by pediatricians may also be protective.

Q. What is still unclear regarding teens’ beliefs about their access to firearms?
A. It is still unclear how teens’ beliefs about their access to firearms affects whether they actually seek them out or how the variability of parents’ practices on storing firearms affects teen access.

Q. Who funded the research study mentioned in the article?
A. The researcher, Rebeccah Sokol, receives funding from the National Institutes of Health and Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.