Study links assault weapons to higher death toll in US mass shootings

IANS February 6, 2025 166 views

A groundbreaking study reveals the devastating impact of assault weapons in mass shootings across the United States. Researchers found that these weapons lead to an average of 0.72 more deaths per attack, with shooters typically having more firearms experience. The study highlights potential prevention strategies, including age-based restrictions and extreme risk protection orders. These findings underscore the critical need for comprehensive firearm regulations to protect public safety.

"Policies regulating firearm access could help prevent mass shootings" - JAMA Network Open Study
Sacramento, Feb 6: New research reveals that mass shootings involving assault weapons result in more deaths and injuries compared to attacks without such firearms, according to a study published in The Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA) Network Open.

Key Points

1

Study analyzed 184 mass shootings from 1966 to 2023

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Assault weapons present in 29% of attacks

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Shooters with assault weapons tend to have more firearms experience

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Policy interventions could potentially reduce mass shooting incidents

The research examined 184 public mass shootings in the United States from 1966 to 2023 and found that incidents where assault weapons were present led to an average of 0.72 more deaths per attack.

According to the study, handguns were the most common type of firearm used, appearing in about 79 per cent of mass shootings. However, assault weapons were present in roughly 29 per cent of the attacks, though only about 7 per cent of shootings involved assault weapons exclusively.

The study also found that shooters using assault weapons tended to have more firearms experience. Only 11 per cent of attackers who used assault weapons had no firearms experience, compared to nearly 30 per cent of those who used other types of weapons.

The researchers noted that there may be opportunities to prevent mass shootings through various interventions. They cited previous research showing that potential mass shooters disclosed their plans in 47 per cent of cases before carrying out attacks.

The study suggests that policies regulating firearm access, including age-based restrictions on assault weapons and secure storage requirements, could help prevent mass shootings. The authors also emphasised the importance of extreme risk protection orders, which allow for the temporary removal of firearms from individuals who may pose a threat, Xinhua news agency reported.

The study defines mass shootings as incidents where four or more people were killed in a public location, not including the shooter, and were not related to other criminal activity.

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