Abstract

A foundational issue in firearms policy has been whether the type of weapon used in an assault affects the likelihood of death. To determine whether the likelihood of death from gunshot wounds inflicted in criminal assaults is associated with the power of the assailant's firearm as indicated by its caliber. Cross-sectional study with multivariate analysis of data on shooting cases extracted by the authors from police investigation files for assaults that took place in Boston, Massachusetts, between January 1, 2010, and December 31, 2014. These data were analyzed between October 1, 2017, and February 18, 2018. In all cases the victim sustained 1 or more gunshot wounds in circumstances that the Boston Police Department deemed criminal. The working sample included all 221 gun homicides and a stratified random sample of 300 nonfatal cases drawn from the 1012 that occurred during the 5-year period. Seven nonfatal cases were omitted because they had been misclassified. The primary source of variation was the caliber of the firearm used to shoot the victim. Whether the victim died from the gunshot wound(s). The final sample of 511 gunshot victims and survivors (n = 220 fatal; n = 291 nonfatal) was predominantly male (n = 470 [92.2%]), black (n = 413 [80.8%]) or Hispanic (n = 69 [13.5%]), and young (mean [SD] age, 26.8 [9.4] years). Police investigations determined firearm caliber in 184 nonfatal cases (63.2%) and 183 fatal cases (83.2%). These 367 cases were divided into 3 groups by caliber: small (.22, .25, and .32), medium (.38, .380, and 9 mm), or large (.357 magnum, .40, .44 magnum, .45, 10 mm, and 7.62 × 39 mm). Firearm caliber had no systematic association with the number of wounds, the location of wounds, circumstances of the assault, or victim characteristics, as demonstrated by χ2 tests of each cluster of variables and by a comprehensive multinomial logit analysis. A logit analysis of the likelihood of death found that compared with small-caliber cases, medium caliber had an odds ratio of 2.25 (95% CI, 1.37-3.70; P = .001) and large caliber had an odds ratio of 4.54 (95% CI, 2.37-8.70; P < .001). Based on a simulation using the logit equation, replacing the medium- and large-caliber guns with small-caliber guns would have reduced gun homicides by 39.5%. Firearms caliber was associated with the likelihood of death from gunshot wounds in criminal assault. Shootings with larger-caliber handguns were more deadly but no more sustained or accurate than shootings with smaller-caliber handguns. This conclusion is of direct relevance to the design of gun policy.

Highlights

  • In 1 of 6 cases of criminal assault inflicting a gunshot wound, the victim dies.[1]

  • A logit analysis of the likelihood of death found that compared with small-caliber cases, medium caliber had an odds ratio of 2.25 and large caliber had an odds ratio of 4.54

  • Firearms caliber was associated with the likelihood of death from gunshot wounds in criminal assault

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Summary

Introduction

In 1 of 6 cases of criminal assault inflicting a gunshot wound, the victim dies.[1]. Whether any such shooting proves fatal is determined by the number and location of wounds and by the size and weight of the bullets, among other variables.[2,3] Systematic studies of gunshot wound severity have documented trends associated with the mix of firearms commonly used in assaults.[4,5] Of particular concern in the 1980s and early 1990s was the rapid shift from revolvers to semiautomatic pistols and from smaller caliber to medium and larger caliber.[6,7] The pistols were more powerful and enabled the shooter to fire a large number of rounds rapidly, increasing the chance of multiple wounds.[6,7,8] While speculative, recent studies suggest a continuing trend toward greater wound severity associated with the greater power of firearms in common use.[9,10] (Improved trauma care may have prevented an increase in the national case-fatality rate.11) It is widely accepted among medical and public health professionals that the likelihood of death in an assault increases with the power of the gun.[2,3,6,7,8,12] But that belief is routinely challenged by advocates and some social scientists in the national debate over gun regulation.[13,14].

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