More children, adolescents, and teenagers die by gunshot than they do in car accidents.
Regardless, the question asked was not how to stop all deaths by all causes. It also was not how do we stop deaths by causes that kill more people than shootings. The question was how do we stop deaths by shootings. The research is clear, simple, and straightforward: if you want to reduce shooting deaths, then the fastest, most effective, least disruptive intervention is to get the guns out of your homes and your communities to the greatest extent that you possibly can.
"Despite widespread perceptions that a gun in the home provides security benefits, nearly all credible studies to date suggest that people who live in homes with guns are at higher - not lower - risk of dying by homicide." -- David Studdert, LLB, ScD, a professor of health policy at the Stanford University School of Medicine and a professor at Stanford Law School.
Regardless, the question asked was not how to stop all deaths by all causes. It also was not how do we stop deaths by causes that kill more people than shootings. The question was how do we stop deaths by shootings. The research is clear, simple, and straightforward: if you want to reduce shooting deaths, then the fastest, most effective, least disruptive intervention is to get the guns out of your homes and your communities to the greatest extent that you possibly can.
"Despite widespread perceptions that a gun in the home provides security benefits, nearly all credible studies to date suggest that people who live in homes with guns are at higher - not lower - risk of dying by homicide." -- David Studdert, LLB, ScD, a professor of health policy at the Stanford University School of Medicine and a professor at Stanford Law School.