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percent lower risk of self-inflicted firearm injuries and an 85 percent lower risk of unintentional <br />firearm injuries among children, compared to those that locked neither; and <br />WHEREAS, a study published in the New England Journal of Medicine of more than 26 <br />million California residents found that women who own a handgun are 35 times more likely to <br />die by firearm suicide than women who do not own one. Men who own a handgun are nearly 8 <br />times more likely to die by firearm suicide than men who do not own a handgun. The study also <br />found that the risk of firearm suicide is most pronounced in the year following a person's first <br />acquisition of a handgun but remains elevated for at least 12 years thereafter; and <br />WHEREAS, a study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association <br />found that in King County, Washington, using data from 2011 to 2018, for every self-defense <br />homicide, there were 44 suicides, seven criminal homicides, and one unintentional death; and <br />WHEREAS, research published in the Annals of Internal Medicine found that only 15 <br />percent of Americans believe that having a firearm in the home increases the risk of suicide, and <br />fewer than 10 percent of gun owners with children believe that household firearms increase <br />suicide risk; and <br />WHEREAS, research published in the American Journal of Preventive Medicine found <br />that nearly six -in -ten (57.6 percent) gun owners believe that a firearm makes their home safer, <br />while only 2.5 percent believe that guns make their home more dangerous. The same study found <br />that nearly four -in -ten (39.2 percent) gun owners who believe that guns increase safety store <br />their household firearm(s) loaded and unlocked; and <br />WHEREAS, research published in Injury Prevention found that people living in <br />households with firearms misperceive their risk of firearm injury as compared to people living in <br />households without firearms. Firearms owners, and non -owners living with firearm owners, are <br />60 percent and 46 percent (respectively) less likely to worry about firearm injury as compared to <br />respondents without guns in the home, despite evidence that firearm access in the home is a <br />strong risk factor for firearm injury; and <br />WHEREAS, a report by the Pew Research Center on Americans' attitudes towards <br />firearms found that three quarters (75 percent) of American gun owners say they feel safer with a <br />gun in their household than they would without a gun. The same study found that two-thirds (67 <br />percent) of gun owners cite protection as a major reason for owning a gun; and <br />WHEREAS, a study published in the Russell Sage Foundation Journal of the Social <br />Sciences found that almost two out of three -gun owners (63 percent) report that a primary reason <br />they own their gun is for protection against people. Among handgun owners, more than three <br />quarters (76 percent) cite protection against people as a major reason for owning their firearm(s); <br />and <br />Ordinance No. 1834, Series 2022 <br />Page 2 of 6 <br />