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. 2025 Jul 1;8(7):e2519266.
doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2025.19266.

Firearm Storage and Firearm Suicide

Affiliations

Firearm Storage and Firearm Suicide

Matthew Miller et al. JAMA Netw Open. .

Abstract

Importance: Suicide-prevention interventions often recommend removing firearms from the homes of individuals at elevated risk of suicide or, short of removal, locking and unloading all household firearms. The recommendation to remove firearms is based on strong and consistent evidence. For adults, however, the recommendation to lock firearms is based on few studies with inconsistent findings.

Objective: To assess the association between firearm storage practices and suicide method by sex and age.

Design, setting, and participants: This case-control study investigated decedents aged 15 years or older who lived in a home with firearms in the last year of their life and who died by suicide. Data were from the 1993 National Mortality Followback Survey. Analyses were conducted from June 1, 2024, to March 30, 2025.

Exposures: The presence of 1 or more unlocked firearm in the decedent's residence and/or 1 or more loaded firearm.

Main outcomes and measures: The main outcome was firearm storage practices by suicide method. Logistic models, including both exposures, compared the relative odds of exposure among decedents who died by firearm suicide vs nonfirearm suicide, adjusted for sex, age, and region of residence at the time of death.

Results: Among the 725 individuals who died by suicide (mean [SD] age, 47.1 [19.7] years; 554 males [85.0%]), 606 (83.6%) decedents died by firearm suicide and 119 (16.4%) died by nonfirearm suicide. Adult suicide decedents who used firearms were neither more nor less likely than those who used other suicide methods to have lived in a home where all firearms were locked (odds ratio [OR], 1.15 [95% CI, 0.67-1.95]) or unloaded (OR, 0.78 [95% CI, 0.44-1.36]). Corresponding ORs for locked firearms were 1.29 (95% CI, 0.69-2.44) for men and 0.58 (95% CI, 0.24-1.41) for women; for unloaded firearms, ORs were 0.80 (95% CI, 0.41-1.56) for men and 0.61 (95% CI, 0.25-1.51) for women. Among adolescent and young adult (hereinafter adolescent) decedents aged 15 to 20 years, approximately half (26 of 43 [60.5%]) who died by firearm suicide, but none of the 7 who died by nonfirearm suicide, had lived in a home with unlocked firearms. Among adolescents in households in which all firearms were locked, suicide method was not associated with whether any firearm was unloaded (OR, 1.36 [95% CI, 0.10-18.9]).

Conclusions and relevance: In this case-control study, neither locking nor unloading household firearms was associated with whether adults used a firearm in their suicide. By contrast, adolescents who died by firearm suicide were far more likely to have lived in a household with unlocked firearms than were adolescent decedents who died by nonfirearm suicide methods. Suicide-prevention approaches that aim to reduce suicide mortality, especially for adult subpopulations likely to own firearms, should focus on firearm access rather than storage practices.

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Conflict of interest statement

Conflict of Interest Disclosures: None reported.

Comment in

  • doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2025.19271

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