2023 - 2026, Active

Store Safely: Firearm Injury Prevention for Rural Families

Affiliated Project

Firearm related injuries are the leading cause of death among youth in the United States, with firearms accounting for over half of our nation’s suicide deaths. Rates of firearm-related suicides among rural youth are increasing at an alarming rate and although safe firearm storage reduces risk, few interventions exist that are tailored to rural communities where firearms are prevalent and an important part of community and family culture. Store Safely, a culturally tailored multi-component primary prevention strategy for rural families will be tested using a Hybrid Type 2 (Curran et al, 2012) effectiveness-implementation design to examine its impact on family firearm storage and to determine the most effective dissemination strategies for this highly scalable intervention.

Abstract

Firearm injuries are the leading cause of death among youth in the United States and rates of firearm-related suicides among rural youth are increasing at an alarming rate. Reducing access to firearms is a key component of suicide prevention because 91% of suicide attempts with a firearm are fatal. Although safe firearm storage reduces risk of firearm injury and death, few interventions exist that are tailored to rural communities where firearms are prevalent and an important part of community and family culture and where health care access disparities limit opportunities for safe storage education. Store Safely is a multi-component online primary prevention strategy designed via a university-community partnership specifically for rural firearm owning families that has shown promise in terms of its acceptability, feasibility, and preliminary impact. In a sample of 43 rural families, 98% reported engaging with all intervention components and 86% completed a home safety checklist. 40% of families self-reported making a change to their storage, such as purchasing gun locks, safes, or lockboxes; separating ammunition from weapons; reviewing the safety of current storage practices; and relocating firearms to a location harder to access by their children. 80% found Store Safely to be culturally sensitive and would recommend the materials to other parents. In response to this urgent need, the project team will use a community-based participatory research (CBPR) approach and a Hybrid Type 2 (Curran et al, 2012) effectiveness-implementation framework to test this innovative, highly scalable online intervention. Specific aims include: 1) refinement of the Store Safely intervention, incorporating feedback from the pilot trial and our community partners, 2) a pilot RCT of 20 families to refine measures and procedures, and 3) a hybrid-two trial with 600 rural firearm owning families randomized to receive Store Safely or a wait list control to provide definitive assessment of the impact of Store Safely on the primary intervention target of locked firearm storage as well as mechanisms of intervention to include knowledge, attitudes, and behavioral intentions as well as family safety behaviors, such as home safety checks. Implementation questions are designed to identify the most fruitful means of reaching and recruiting families to the intervention. If found to be effective, Store Safely has the potential to reduce suicide mortality in rural areas by capitalizing on the strengths of rural communities to enhance safety.

Project Team

Cynthia Ewell Foster, PhD
Cheryl King, PhD
Jason Goldstick, PhD
Patrick Carter, MD
Courtney Bagge, PhD, Co-Investigator
Sarah Derwin, Co-Investigator

Funders

Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control

Partners

Marquette County Health Department