Posted on 06/20/2011 9:11:22 AM PDT by drypowder
Gun ownership, carrying a gun linked to heavy alcohol use Large, multi-state study shows certain gun owners more likely to drink excessively
June 14, 2011
(SACRAMENTO, Calif.) Gun owners who carry concealed weapons or have confronted another person with a gun are more than twice as likely to drink heavily as people who do not own guns, according to a study by UC Davis researchers. Binge drinking, chronic heavy alcohol use, and drinking and driving were all more common among gun owners generally than among non-owners, even after adjusting for factors such as age, sex, race, and state of residence. But alcohol abuse was most common among firearm owners who participated in gun-related behaviors that carry a risk of violence, which also included having a loaded, unlocked firearm in the home and driving or riding in a vehicle with a loaded firearm.
The UC Davis study, which appears online in the journal Injury Prevention, analyzed telephone survey results for more than 15,000 people in eight states. The highest levels of alcohol abuse were reported by gun owners who engaged in dangerous behavior with their weapons. For example, gun owners who also drove or rode in motor vehicles with loaded guns were more than four times as likely to drink and drive as were people who did not own guns. But gun owners who did not travel with loaded guns were still more than twice as likely to drink and drive as were people who did not own guns.
Its not surprising that risky behaviors go together, said Garen J. Wintemute, author of the study and director of the UC Davis Violence Prevention Research Program. This is of particular concern given that alcohol intoxication also impairs a gun users accuracy as well as his judgment on whether to shoot.
Wintemute, a professor of emergency medicine at the UC Davis School of Medicine and one of the worlds foremost experts on gun-related violence, analyzed data from the Centers for Disease Control and Preventions Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System. Study data on firearms ownership and alcohol use came from telephone interviews done in 1996 and 1997 with people in Alaska, Colorado, Hawaii, Mississippi, New Hampshire, New Jersey, North Dakota and Ohio. Participants were asked if they owned a gun, as well as if they engaged in specific firearm-related behaviors. Respondents also were asked about their consumption of alcohol, including whether they have had five or more alcoholic drinks on one occasion; if they drove after consuming perhaps too much alcohol; or if they had 60 or more drinks per month.
The article suggests several reasons why dangerous behavior involving alcohol and firearms might be linked. Drinking can impair judgment and lead people to use firearms in ways that they would otherwise avoid. Alternatively, underlying personality traits, such as impulsiveness or an inclination to take risks, could lead to an increase in dangerous behavior involving alcohol and guns.
The study also evaluated gun owners who indicated that they had attended a firearm-safety workshop in the previous three years. Those respondents were less likely to engage in alcohol-related risk behaviors than those who had not attended a workshop.
The data are 15 years old, but no more recent data are available. Only eight states chose to ask questions about both firearms and alcohol. Despite these limitations, Wintemute said, the studys results provide important evidence about gun ownership and the potential for gun use to be closely associated with the misuse and abuse of alcohol.
New and more comprehensive research is needed, since legislation authorizing the public carrying of loaded and concealed firearms has become almost universal in the United States, said Wintemute. Efforts to separate the use of firearms from the use of alcohol may have important benefits for the health and safety of the public.
According to a 2004 study done by the Harvard School of Public Health, there are 260 to 300 million guns in civilian hands in the United States. The University of Chicagos National Opinion Research Center estimates that 32 percent of American households contain firearms. In 2009, more than 30,000 gun-related deaths occurred around the nation, and more than 78,000 people suffered non-fatal gunshot wounds. About one third of firearm-related deaths involve alcohol. In the last three years, about 25 percent of gunshot-wound victims treated at UC Davis Medical Center tested positive for alcohol.
Federal law does not restrict the purchase or possession of firearms by alcohol abusers, who are sometimes defined as habitual drunkards or alcoholics, and few states do so. Four states allow concealed guns in bars, provided the armed person does not consume alcohol which, noted Wintemute, seems difficult to enforce because the weapons are, by definition, concealed.
The UC Davis Violence Prevention Research Program is an organized research program that addresses the causes, nature and prevention of violence. Its mission is to conduct research to further Americas efforts to understand and prevent violence. Current major areas of emphasis are the prediction of criminal behavior, the effectiveness of waiting-period and background-check programs for prospective purchasers of firearms, and the determinants of firearm violence.
“The UC Davis study”
Says it all - I need to read no further.
Sometimes the smell of BS just reeks from the page!
This is what Liberals mean when they use the word "science."
But I bet they'd never draw a connection with gay behavior and AIDS.
This comes as a surprise to this teetotaler.........../s
How much tax money was wasted on this preconceived conclusion?
Let's not let the facts or lack of them get in the way of a narrative. This is the biggest bunch of BS ever. Last I saw, having half a White Wine spritzer an hour put you in the heavy drinking classification. Go screw you Commie Pinko academic.
Since when is owning a gun, or having a CCW license "risky behavior?"
“The data are 15 years old, but no more recent data are available.”
The KEY to the truth of the story.
I bet if you posited that analogy Mr. Wintemute would choke on his latte...
So what? I bet there is less HIV, homosexuality, illicit drug use, etc. & etc. Could go on all day. Less socialist dependency, and much, much more. Of course the “researchers” aren’t interested in these things...
“Its not surprising that risky behaviors go together, said Garen J. Wintemute...”
Wait - concealed carry is a “risky behavior?”
Who knew?
(Only in the mind of a libtard.)
Is that Qusay?
Huge BS alert
I'll take a guess that "Garen" got his butt kicked a lot as a kid.
Wonder how many of CA's tax dollars funded this nonsense? And continue to pay this clown's salary?
15 years ago, how many States had legal concealed carry?
The “study” doesn’t differentiate between those who illegally concealed carry and those who do so legally.
Those who engage in criminal behavior are more likely to drink? Wow, who knew?
And the three most avid gun owners I know are also teetotalers, two of whom have NEVER touched a drop.
I used to drink, many moons ago, but never owned a gun during those “crazy” years. Now that I rarely drink (I abuse beer — a six-pack can sit in my fridge for a month or more), I own several.
I’m guessing none of us were included in this study...
I wonder if the “gun owners” were asked if they had ever been arrested for criminal behavior? ACTUAL criminal behavior, that is, not the exercise of the right to keep and bear arms....which UC Davis considers criminal. It might actually mean that criminals who have guns are more likely to drink. Or criminals who drink are more likely to engage in gun crimes. And naturally that would REEEEELY be shocking!!!
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.