Abstract
Previous research has linked unsafe firearm storage practices and other ownership-related characteristics to key factors that facilitate the transition from suicidal thoughts to suicidal behaviors (i.e., acquired capability for suicide). This research has not investigated the extent to which firearm owners store firearms in their vehicles, a factor that increases ready access to the most lethal means of suicide.
Objective
This cross-sectional study investigated the prevalence of occasional and permanent vehicle firearm storage as well as demographic and psychological correlates of this practice in a sample of N = 408 adult male firearm owners oversampled for historical thoughts of suicide.
Methods
Participants completed an online survey for monetary compensation.
Results
Over 40% of participants indicated at least occasionally storing firearms in their vehicles with over 15% indicating storage of firearms unlocked and loaded. Elevated scores on measures of negative affect, worry, intolerance of uncertainty, and historical suicidal thoughts and behaviors were seen in those who endorsed vehicle firearm storage compared to those who did not.
Conclusion
Individual and public health firearm safety strategies would benefit from an explicit focus on the transition of firearms to and from one’s vehicle.
Over 40% of male firearm owners at least occasionally store a firearm in a vehicle.
15% of those who store a firearm in a vehicle do so unlocked and loaded.
Suicidal thought severity was related to storing a firearm in a vehicle.
Historical suicidal behaviors were related to storing a firearm in a vehicle.
HIGHLIGHTS
Keywords:
DISCLOSURE STATEMENT
M.A. receives personal income from a book on the topic of means safety. He also receives consulting and speaking fees related to means safety C.B. receives personal income from training workshops related to lethal means counseling.
AUTHOR NOTES
Raymond P. Tucker, Jeff Powers, Sarah Pardue-Bourgeois, Nicolas Oakey-Frost, Emma H. Moscardini, and Shawn P. Gilroy, Louisiana State University, Baton Rouge, Louisiana, USA. Daniel W. Capron, University of Mississippi, Hattiesburg, Mississippi, USA. Craig J. Bryan, Ohio State University, Columbus, Ohio, USA. Michael D. Anestis, Rutgers University, New Brunswick, New Jersey, USA.