| Literature DB >> 32667652 |
Marian E Betz1,2, Deborah Azrael3, Rachel L Johnson4, Christopher E Knoepke5,6, Megan L Ranney7, Garen J Wintemute8, Daniel Matlock2,9, Krithika Suresh4, Matthew Miller3,10.
Abstract
Importance: The population of adults with Alzheimer disease and related dementias (ADRD) is increasing, and many people with ADRD have access to firearms. Little is known, however, about how caregivers of people with ADRD think about or address firearm safety. Objective: To assess views on firearm safety risks among caregivers of persons with ADRD, experiences of caregivers with health care professional-delivered counseling, and their preferred sources of information about firearm safety. Design, Setting, and Participants: This survey study used a probability-based online survey (National Firearms Survey, July 30 to August 11, 2019) with weights used to generate nationally representative estimates of adults living in households with firearms to assess firearm safety views of English-speaking adults 35 years or older. Respondents for the National Firearm Survery were drawn from I KnowledgePanel, a frame with approximately 55 000 US adults selected on an ongoing basis using address-based sampling methods. Main Outcomes and Measures: Caregivers were asked whether the person with ADRD owned or had access to firearms. Additional ADRD-related measures assessed perceptions about the likelihood of types of firearm injuries involving people with ADRD, support for firearm safety counseling by health care professionals with regard to dementia, and history of ever having received such counseling.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32667652 PMCID: PMC7364369 DOI: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2020.7756
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JAMA Netw Open ISSN: 2574-3805
Characteristics of the 124 Responding Caregivers
| Characteristic | Finding |
|---|---|
| Age group, y | |
| 35-59 | 49 (39-59) |
| ≥60 | 51 (41-61) |
| Female | 51 (30-81) |
| Race/ethnicity | |
| Non-Hispanic white | 80 (70-87) |
| Non-Hispanic black | 10 (5-20) |
| Hispanic | 3 (1-10) |
| Married | 72 (62-81) |
| Household size, median (IQR) | 2 (2-3) |
| Some college or higher | 66 (55-75) |
| Carried loaded handgun in past 30 d | 14 (9-23) |
| Frequency of handling gun for any reason in past y | |
| Daily, weekly, or monthly | 17 (11-26) |
| Less than monthly | 83 (74-89) |
| Personally owns firearms | |
| No, but lives with a gun owner | 31 (23-41) |
| Yes | 69 (59-77) |
| Handgun | 85 (76-92) |
| Primarily for protection against people | 82 (71-90) |
| Long gun | 60 (48-71) |
| Primarily for hunting | 45 (32-60) |
| Has had formal firearms training | 46 (36-56) |
| Believes having a gun in the home makes it safer | 83 (75-89) |
| Has ≥1 gun in home stored loaded and unlocked | 25 (16-37) |
| Has ever stored a gun for a friend or family member when concerned it was not safe for them to have access | 19 (12-29) |
| As part of routine care, health care professionals should talk with their patients about firearms if their patient or patient's family member has ADRD | |
| Yes, always | 55 (45-65) |
| Yes, sometimes | 28 (20-37) |
| No | 17 (10-26) |
Abbreviations: ADRD, Alzheimer disease and related dementias; IQR, interquartile range.
Data are presented as weighted percentage (95% CI) unless otherwise indicated.
Estimate from owners.
Figure 1. Rankings of Responses Among 124 Caregivers to the Question, “Which Is Most Likely for a Person With Alzheimer Disease?”
Participants were asked to rank each of the 3 scenarios as most, second most, or least likely. Data are the aggregate responses with 95% CIs (error bars).
Characteristics and Experiences Among Caregivers, by Residence
| Characteristic or experience | Weighted % (95% CI) | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Total (N = 124) | Lives with person with dementia (n = 49) | Does not live with person with dementia (n = 75) | |
| Person with dementia | |||
| Spouse or partner | 17 (11-26) | 36 (23-52) | 4 (1-10) |
| Parent or stepparent | 55 (45-65) | 36 (22-54) | 68 (55-79) |
| Another family member | 18 (12-27) | 22 (11-37) | 17 (8-29) |
| Not related | 9 (5-17) | 6 (2-17) | 12 (6-23) |
| Person with dementia able to access guns in your or their home | |||
| Yes | 15 (9-24) | 31 (18-49) | 3 (1-10) |
| No, cannot any longer | 25 (17-35) | 18 (9-33) | 30 (19-43) |
| No, have never been able to | 60 (50-70) | 50 (34-66) | 67 (54-78) |
| Ever had concerns about person with dementia having firearm access | 11 (7-19) | 10 (4-23) | 13 (7-23) |
| You, friends, or family did something | 53 (28-77) | 46 (12-85) | 57 (26-83) |
| Does person with dementia own a firearm? | |||
| No | 81 (72-88) | 68 (51-81) | 90 (80-95) |
| Not sure | 2 (0.5-8) | 2 (0.3-16) | 2 (0.2-11) |
| Yes | 17 (11-26) | 29 (17-46) | 9 (4-18) |
| Person with dementia has plan for securing, removing, or transferring guns if it becomes unsafe for them to handle them | |||
| Yes, written | 20 (7-45) | 14 (3-46) | 33 (7-75) |
| Yes, not written | 38 (18-64) | 33 (11-66) | 51 (16-85) |
| No | 23 (6-59) | 32 (8-72) | 0 (0-0) |
| Do not know or not sure | 19 (6-48) | 21 (5-58) | 16 (2-63) |
| Health care practitioner has ever spoken to you about firearm safety | 5 (2-12) | 2 (0-11) | 7 (2-18) |
P < .001.
P < .01.
Figure 2. Responses of 124 Caregivers of Where They Had, Would, or Would Not Look for Answers to Questions About Firearm Safety in the Context of Dementia
Multiple responses allowed. Error bars indicate 95% CIs.