Abstract
ABSTRACTBetween 1996 and 2018, there was little federally funded research on gun violence, even though it remains a perennial issue, resulting in considerable loss of life. Advocacy and academic groups piece together data to conduct their research, but the U.S. firearms data infrastructure is limited. A current National Institute of Health (NIH)‐funded coordinating center led by researchers at the University of Michigan aims to help confront that problem. This Quality Improvement (QI) study seeks to uncover the information needs of researchers in firearm injury prevention and community‐based interventions through interviews with public health, medical, and criminal justice researchers. Interviews reveal problems associated with existing databases and infrastructures, as well as what researchers need to support their research. We find fragmented data resources and a lag in public health data availability create obstacles to obtaining many datasets. The researchers also describe problems and opportunities for data harmonization across intervention‐focused studies.
Published Version
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