From 1920 through 1989, an average of
21.7 people died in U.S. traffic accidents per 100,000 of population.
From 1990 through the first 9 months of
2012, the average was 15.9.
Since 2000, the number is 13.4. For the
last three years (counting the partial year 2012), the number has
remained below 11.
This decline has been the result of a
number of factors, but the overarching reason that encompasses all of
them is that the nation began looking at traffic fatalities as a
serious public health issue that needed to be addressed.
Part of the improved safety record
resulted from technological improvements, safer cars, some mandated and some not. I'm not a car
enthusiast, but off the top of my head, I can think of seat belts,
air bags, strategic reinforcements of the car so as to reduce the
effects of various types of collisions, and no doubt many more
important design improvements I know nothing about.
Another part of the effort involved
successful educational efforts that brought about behavioral changes
in the population. Anyone my age remembers people who refused to let
the government tell them they had to wear seat belts, by gawd. These
people didn't want to know anything about statistics; they had their
opinion. But they came around, or died off. As evidence that
automobile and driver safety was considered a public health issue,
people my generation will remember when doctors began asking if you
used your seat belt.
Another important result of the
educational efforts has been a seismic change in the national
attitude toward drinking and driving, much of it due to the educational work of
MADD.
The decline in smoking in the U.S. has
perhaps been less dramatic, perhaps not. Smoking rates in the U.S.
are about half of what they were in the mid-1960s, and I don't know
what the current data shows, but the last I saw, the rate of teens
taking up smoking was decreasing. Not much of this
improvement can be said to result from technological changes,
government-mandated or otherwise, although there may have been some mandates regarding the levels of tar and nicotine. Mostly it has resulted from
government-enforced behavioral changes (limiting smoking in public
places) and educational efforts. Once again, as with seat belts,
behavioral changes that result from government mandates don't come
without some resistance. We all knew people who thought their
god-given right to smoke superseded everyone else's right to breathe
smoke-free air. Perhaps there are a few of them still around, but
they're rare these days.
The current elephant in the room as
regards public health issue, is gun violence. A friend, in a recent
blog post, cited Justice Department data which shows that gun
violence and the number of gun-related homicides has actually gone
down in the last 20 years, even though, if you are murdered, odds are
it will be by someone using a gun. While that reduction may surprise
many people, what should alarm us is that we have no idea why it has
happened.
Part of the answer may involve the
aging of the population. Another part probably relates to policing
procedures which have contributed to a decrease in crime overall, and not just
violent crime. A recent New Yorker article that I'm not going to hunt
for at the moment looked at the reduction in crime in New York City
since the 1980s. One of the biggest factors identified was the police
application of the broken-window theory.
But the point is that we don't have any
idea why gun violence is down over the last two decades beyond the
fact that it mirrors a general decrease in crime. The CDC began
treating gun violence as a public health issue sometime in the 1980s,
at least to the point of collecting research data. In the mid
1990s, the NRA used its political leverage to see to it that the
CDC's budget was cut by exactly the amount of money it was spending
on gun violence research.
Apparently for the following few years,
some private foundations stepped up to fill the funding gap, but that
has almost all fallen away. One of the principle researchers in the
field now discourages his graduate students from doing gun research,
because it is a dead end that will only lead to frustrations.
One supreme irony, or example of
chutzpah, is that when anyone cites research findings from the time
when the CDC was still involved, the gun lobby routinely dismisses it
derisively as “old data” and, therefore, worthless. (Or to use
one of my favorite Archie Bunker-isms, ipso fatso worthless.)
I'm just thankful the founding fathers didn't write cars and tobacco into the Bill of Rights.
3 comments:
Again, well done. You probably expect some disagreement from me, as a gun owner and as a supporter of the legal ownership of guns, but your focus is on finding out why the drop. Excellent point and I fully endorse it.
I am not aware of the NRA's role that you mention, don't doubt it though. Right now we have only the "rain dance" concepts of why this is happening, why it isn't happening in places that have strict gun laws, like Connecticut and Chicago. We also have no idea whatsoever as to why one violent act, the "random mass shooting" has increased in frequency.
Let's do as you suggest, focus attention on why gun violence is decreasing (and not by a little, by a lot!) and how we can support it.
Thanks for the good info.
There is altogether too much agreement going on here. I can´t handle it.
Will see what I can do to change that.
For one thing, I don´t want to focus merely on why gun violence is decreasing or why the mass shootings have increased. I want the government to fund research, most logically I think through the CDC, but elsewhere if need be, that looks at gun violence from every conceivable angle and asks every imaginable question of who, why, how, what etc.
More later.
Lemme think. I will try to come up with an outlandish position paper on the subject.
Seriously, extreme positions on both sides do not help. Senator Feinstein's proposals have not worked, do not work, and will not work. Let's try something that might work? Like trying to get smart people to look at facts.
I have been racking my brain to come up with the theory that coincided with the decline in gun violence. Do you remember that conversation a long time ago? That was my reference to "rain dance" stuff.
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