Title: ActionOriented Research on Small Arms Injuries: Needs and Challenges
1Action-Oriented Research on Small Arms Injuries
Needs and Challenges
IPPNW-COST Workshop, Helsinki, 8 September 2006
- Keith Krause, Small Arms Survey, Geneva
2The Context
- Good news international attention on armed
violence is growing, and has never been higher - Bad news the problem is serious, and few
effective practical measures have been
implemented - Complex issue weapons possession and use is
embedded in complex social networks - Multiple stakeholders with multiple agendas
3Small Arms Direct Effects
- More than 300,000 fatal injuries in 2003
- 80-100,000 of these in conflict
- 200-270,000 from homicide, suicide and accident
- Young males at risk
4Small Arms Indirect Effects
- Excess mortality in conflict contexts
- Criminal violence
- Costs to public health system
- Delivery of basic services or humanitarian aid
- Population Displacement
- Economic opportunity costs
5Needs Five Baskets
- Systematic data collection
- Comprehensive picture direct/indirect
consequences - Effective costing models
- Information on weapons availability
- Broader socio-economic data
6Data Collection
- Systematic collection of data on deaths and
injuries, at least in representative sample of
institutions - Better catchment area analysis to allow
extrapolation - Ongoing surveillance of armed violence
- Creative techniques eg matching crime, public
health and survey data (capture-recapture, etc.)
7Measuring the Direct and Indirect Impacts of
Armed Violence
8Costing Models
Total costs of violence amount to 12-20 of
Latin Americas GDP Costs of gun violence to
societies are higher than other types of violence
Average medical costs per gunwound and stab,
Brazil and Colombia (2003 PPP USD)
9Weapons Availability and Use
- No simple relationship between availability and
use - Which guns, in whose hands, are associated with
which types of armed violence - What is the socio-culture context for guns and
violence
10Socio-economic context of armed violence
- Demographic Age, gender
- Geographic urban vs. peri-urban vs. rural armed
violence - Socio-economic income, education, employment
- Temporal time of day, day of week, time of year
- Contagion, opportunity and neighbourhood effects
11Policy/Advocacy Challenges
- Acknowledge the relative importance of the issue,
depending on the context - Emphasize the greater costs of armed violence
relative to other kinds of violence - Determine the cost-effectiveness of interventions
- Slow translation from evidence to action to
prevent or reduce armed violence