my.jhsph.eduBloomberg School of Public Health HomeDEPARTMENTSACADEMICSRESOURCESRESEARCH & CENTERSADMISSIONS
Public Health News
NEWS CENTER

Home

Terrorism and Public Health Preparedness

News Archives

SUBSCRIPTIONS

RSS/Podcasts 
Magazine 
Email Updates
 
Media Archive

MEDIA INQUIRIES

Media Services

410-955-6878

paffairs@jhsph.edu

HIGHLIGHTS

School at a Glance 

Dean's Letter

Accreditation

Scholars

Lectureships

Student Webpages

Honors & Awards

PUBLICATIONS

Saving Lives Millions at a Time

Johns Hopkins Public Health Magazine



View Contents

Johns Hopkins Public Health Magazine

View Contents

View Contents



Learn About Our Global Projects
Learn About Our Global Projects

Learn About Our Global Projects



 email to a colleague | support our research 

July 26, 2002

Gun Safety Programs for Children and Teens Not Effective

Teaching children and teens to stay away from guns, or behave responsibly on their own around guns, does not work, according to a report from The David and Lucile Packard Foundation. The report, “Children, Youth, and Gun Violence,” says that parents and policymakers should focus on keeping guns away from unsupervised children rather than trying to teach children not to play with guns when they are found.

The report recommended implementing programs to educate parents on proper gun safety and on how to keep their children safe from guns. In addition, it suggested that new product safety standards be implemented to make guns harder to fire and that policymakers should implement tighter restrictions on gun sales, safe gun designs and product safety regulations.

“It may be shocking to the public to think that toy guns and other toys are scrutinized by the Consumer Product Safety Commission, while real guns, with the potential to do so much harm, are not,” said Stephen P. Teret, JD, MPH, an author of the report and professor of health policy and management at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. Professor Teret is also the immediate past director at the School’s Center for Gun Policy and Research and current director of the Center for Law and the Public’s Health.

The “Children, Youth, and Gun Violence” report is the most recent issue of The Future of Children, a journal of The David and Lucile Packard Foundation. Professor Teret was the issue editorial advisor and also co-authored the report’s article “Product-Oriented Approaches to Reducing Youth Gun Violence.”

The Future of Children report, “Children, Youth, and Gun Violence.”

Report Summary

The David and Lucile Packard Foundation

Public Affairs Media Contacts for the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health: Tim Parsons or Kenna Brigham @ 410-955-6878 or paffairs@jhsph.edu.

TOOLS

Contact JHSPH
Feedback
Email this Page
Course Search
Faculty Directory
Find an Expert
CoursePlus

Make a Gift

SEARCH
LEARN MORE ABOUT
Malaria

Online: "Progress Against Malaria"

"Breaking the Cycle" Special Report

Malaria Research Institute

Pandemic Flu

Pandemic Flu Guide for Individuals and Families

FAQ

Water

The Future of Drinking Water: Making it Safe

Email Hoax About Freezing Water Bottles



Johns Hopkins University

  © 2008, Johns Hopkins University. All rights reserved.
 Web policies, 615 N. Wolfe Street, Baltimore, MD 21205, 410-955-6878