Authors
Alvaro Castillo-Carniglia, Rose MC Kagawa, Daniel W Webster, Jon S Vernick, Magdalena Cerdá, Garen J Wintemute
Publication date
2018/12/1
Journal
Injury Prevention
Volume
24
Issue
6
Pages
431-436
Publisher
BMJ Publishing Group Ltd
Description
Background
Comprehensive background check (CBC) policies are hypothesised to reduce firearm-related violence because they extend background checks to private party firearm sales, but no study has determined whether these policies actually increase background checks, an expected intermediary outcome. We evaluate the association between CBC policies and the rates of firearm background checks in three states that recently implemented these policies: Delaware (July 2013), Colorado (July 2013) and Washington (December 2014).
Methods
We used the synthetic control group method to estimate the difference from estimated counterfactual postintervention trends in the monthly rate of background checks per 1 00 000 people for handguns, long guns and both types combined, using data for January 1999 through December 2016. Inference was based on results from permutation tests. We conducted …
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