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Prevention of Firearms Death and Injury among Youth. Overview. Background Problem : Firearms and Youth Risk Factors Stakeholder Roles Tools Next Steps. Approach. to develop community based tools which can be used to support implementation of the firearms law in Quebec
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Overview • Background • Problem : Firearms and Youth • Risk Factors • Stakeholder Roles • Tools • Next Steps
Approach • to develop community based tools which can be used to support implementation of the firearms law in Quebec • focus on vulnerable groups • intervention models - for urban and rural contexts.
Firearm death • Public health experts view firearm death like disease • firearm death has common cause availability and use of firearms
Firearms and Youth • suicide • injury and accidental death • family violence • young offenders: taxing, gang activity
Objectives Understand youth suicide and victimisation with firearms • The Problem • The Risk factors • Interventions • Implementation issues • Evaluation
Problem:Misconceptions Some misconceptions are that: • Only criminals, gangs misuse firearms • Problem is handguns not rifles and shotguns • Homicide is major cause of death with firearms (not suicide)
PROBLEM:Suicide CANADA • Suicide in Canada: 3760 per year • Second leading cause of death in 15-24 year olds • Firearms are the most common instrument for males (25%)
Suicide Quebec • 1300 suicides, 1/3 of total in Canada • 2nd highest rate in world • 1/3 of suicides with firearms - most common is .22 rifle • males, youth and elderly at risk • particular problem in rural areas • first nations in Quebec high risk group
Suicide - Youth • Leading cause of death of 15-24 year olds in Quebec • annual average firearm suicides for youth • Canada -155 (rate is 3.56) • Quebec- 46 (rate is 4.49)
Problem: Family Violence • 30% of spousal murders are with firearms • 50% of teens killed in family violence with firearms • 80% are legally owned firearms • presence of firearms in violent families : tool of intimidation • escalation of violence into murder increases with firearms • effect on children of violence: future victims, aggressors
Youth Victimisation • Canada: 23% victims of crime 15-24 year old (11% of population) • Youth is largest group of victims of violent crime in Montreal • bullying and victimisation can lead to victims becoming violent with guns (Taber, Alberta; Colombine, CSDM incidents)
Youth Offenders and Gangs • Montreal: Gang gun violence (1997 - 4 murders, 11 attempted murders) • firearms play role in escalation of intimidation and violence • certain Montreal schools find guns or replicas monthly
Risk Factors Suicide- General • Personal Predisposition • (Previous suicidal behaviour, mental disorders, substance abuse • Social environment (lack of social network, unemployment, physical or sexual abuse) • Life event (death, illness, humiliating events, interpersonal problems)
Risk Factors : Youth Suicide • Personal Predisposition - poor adaptation, learning difficulties, impulsivity previous suicidal behaviour, mental disorders, difficulty with sexual orientation,chronic difficulty with peer relations • Social environment (lack of social network, mental disorders in family, unemployment, physical or sexual abuse, neglect) • Life event (death, divorce, rejection of parents, substance use, academic failure, pressure, interpersonal problems)
Risk Factors :Youth Violence • (previous points) • aggression, anti-social behaviour • family violence • poor parenting: lack of emotional interaction, lack of parental supervision, inconsistant, harsh discipline • impulsivity, desire for power, imitative
Lethality Model Factors Affecting the Frequency of Violent Events Incidence of Violence Injury Outcomes Factors Affecting the Severity of Violent Incidents GUNS
Links to firearm access • Risk of suicide in urban homes with guns: 5x increase • Risk of homicide in urban homes with guns: 3x increase • Regional variations in Canada • BUT: in Quebec decline in firearm suicides not reflected in overall decline
Youth Access to Guns • Home is where majority of gun death and accidents take place • 24% of Quebec homes have guns • 33% guns not safely stored • long guns:hunters in family • hand guns: illegal or restricted weapon (ie children of police, military)
STAKEHOLDER ROLES • For law to be effective, need community participation in implementation • Must understand Risks • Must take Preventative Action- voluntary removal of firearms; counselling; legal interventions • Must raise general community awareness of problem and solutions
Target Audiences • Parents and families: understand the risks and take appropriate action • Health care professionals: know the signs, provide counselling, intervene • Guidance Counsellors and teachers: know the signs, provide counselling, intervene • Social workers, youth workers: know the risks, intervene • Police: identify risks, intervene • Communities-report potential problem
School Intervention-Example • Identify at risk youth (violence or suicide) • Routinely query parents of troubled youth re: access to guns at home or elsewhere (family members, friends, neighbours) • Suggest gun be removed temporarily
OPPORTUNITY AREAS • Increase awareness of suicide, violence risks and firearms: data and trend analysis (fact-based decisions and interventions) • Integration of “firearms” into other suicide, violence prevention and community strategies • Taking preventative action - clear procedures: “when in doubt say no”
Ask a Question, Save a Life • Do you have access to a gun? • Does your (suicidal) son\daughter have access to a gun? • Does the person who threatens you have access to a gun? • Does the person who threatens your mother have access to a gun?
Success Stories • Licensing process improves risk assessment and includes hotline • Decline in reported suicides with firearms 1990-1999 in Quebec (but increase in suicide overall) • Decline in firearms death across Canada with increased gun control
Best Practice Examples • Batshaw Children and Family services implementing screening for firearms in domestic violence calls and for suicidal youth in their care • Centres de Jeunesse, Services Psycho-sociaux are also looking at adding specific question re:guns • Montreal Children’s Crisis Team- screening for firearms
Best Practices • ShelterNet, Federation des ressources d’hébergement pour femmes violentées includes screening for guns in their new guide • Quebec provincial strategy on suicide recognizes firearms issues • Educational efforts already underway (eg. Lac Ste. Jean) • Romeo Dallaire who suffers from depression and PST asked police to take his firearms
Best Practices- Policing • Increased Awareness, improved procedures • Appropriate enforcement of safe storage • Safe storage of police firearms • Police called to suicide attempts routinely query presence of firearms • Reporting and record keeping to support licensing and revocation • Procedures: determine presence of guns when risk is identified
NEXT STEPS • Suggestions- what works in your organisation • Are there current initiatives - programs, interventions for school professionals where guns could be included • Resource materials • Contacts