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A Split Second From Disaster?
November 22, 2006
Courage is the price that Life exacts for granting peace.
-Amelia Earhart
Guns account for 10 percent of all deaths among children ages 5 to 14, and for every child who dies from a gunshot wound, three others are injured, and a quarter of those injuries bring on permanent disabilities (Brody, 2006). Many young children are all too familiar with guns, having seen them on television, in movies, or in video games. " As a result, some children may not realize that when a real person is shot, he may never get up again."

The most frequent perpetrator in childhood gunshot fatalities and injuries is another child, who may have assumed that the gun wasn't loaded or wasn't real. The most frequent sites of childhood encounters with guns are their own homes or the homes of friends or relatives.
  • A review of firearm ownership and storage in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine revealed, "firearms are as likely to be present in U.S. homes with children as in homes without children, and they are often stored in unlocked locations and/or loaded.
  • The May issue of The Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine revealed that children knew a lot more about the location of guns in the home and were far more likely to have handled those guns than their parents thought.
  • A study by Dr. Tamera Coyne-Beasley found one-third of gun owners in the United States with children under 6 kept a firearm unlocked at home, and guns were kept unlocked in 56 percent of homes where children visited.
These findings suggest that teachers may be able to play a role in helping parents lock and empty firearms, and help teach children that, "guns are not toys, that violence on television or in the movies is not real, and that guns in real life can cause injury or death." Second, they must be told never to touch a gun and to assume a gun is loaded and can be fired. If they find a gun anywhere, or encounter someone handling a gun, they must leave the area at once, go to a safe place, and tell an adult what happened as soon as possible.

Brody, J. (2006, August 1). "Is your child a split second from disaster?" The New York Times, D7. This is also available from The New York Times online (@ $4.95)

Contributed by Michael Kalinowski

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Comments (3)

Displaying All 3 Comments
mukti a oza · January 01, 2007
dr radhakrishnan vidhyalaya
mumbai, maharashtra, United States


thank you, that information really helps! in my school , we teach that gun is friend of letter 'G'. although i was against it, never had a stong ground to argue. however i will share this info with my school and with my students too. thank you again.

L. Henderson Bell · November 28, 2006
Mt.Pleasant Baptist Church
Kansas City, Missouri, United States


Thank you for the statistical information on the number of persons who live in fear of home invasion and other undesirable incidents happening in their immediate vicinity that tehy feel neccessiates having a weapon close at hand. Your information points to the facts that there is adire need to difuse the fear taht many people are living with through some medium of reconcilliation of family and friends who place themselves at risk through reacting to the thoughts of what could happen and forgetting the other end of the spectrum of what might happen. Thank you again for your inforamtion;
L. Henderson Bell

Michael Casey · November 22, 2006
Shrewsbury Childrens Center
Shrewsbury, MA, United States


I recently received a flyer from the Eddie Eagle gun safety program sponsored by the NRA. Even though I am an NRA member and a Second Amendment supporter I hesitated to receive these free materials because of the potential for "controversy" about the NRA and firearms ownership. After reading todays Exchange Everyday I will send for the materials for our 5 preschool classrooms.



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