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Kids and Guns: WA’s Lethal Combination

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Wednesday, June 11, 2008   

Seattle, WA - One-third of Washington households contain at least one gun – and a new study may prompt parents to rethink that situation, especially with kids home for the summer. The Children's Defense Fund (CDF) says almost 50 youngsters per year are killed by firearms in Washington, based on its analysis of figures from 2003 through 2005.

The state "Lok It Up" program has promoted gun safety education and safe gun storage for a decade, but this year its funding was eliminated. It is being continued by some counties on a voluntary basis, however, and its Web site
(depts.washington.edu/lokitup) receives as many as 16,000 visits per month.

County health departments investigate all child deaths. Tony Gomez, manager of the Violence and Injury Prevention program for the Seattle/King County Public Health Department, says it's an especially tough job in cases of accidental shootings and suicides.

"We often really get into, 'How was the firearm stored?' And sadly, what often is the case, is that a child that was depressed had some things go wrong, and the family firearm – a handgun, or long gun – was just readily available."

Gomez says gun safety is now part of Washington medical and law enforcement training, to help doctors and police recognize potential problems. He adds there's no excuse not to keep guns under lock, and technology has made it easier to do so.

"Some of the higher-end locks recognize fingerprints. They can be installed to be part of the home security system and electronically monitored, with an alarm that goes off within the home, all those sorts of things."

The CDF's position is that locking guns up isn't sufficient, and that gun access along with today's steady diet of violence on television and in movies and video games, has been a lethal combination for American kids. The group also wants to see stronger gun safety laws, parents who refuse to buy products that glamorize violence, and more safe activities for kids when they’re not in school.

Its report, "Protect Children, Not Guns," says that, in the three years studied, child gun deaths increased nationwide for the first time since 1994.

Read it online, at www.childrensdefense.org.

In Washington, firearms are the fourth leading cause of death.





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