Thursday, July 5, 2007

Is There A Gun Where Your Child Plays?

Safe Kids Kansas joins gun safety advocates in urging parents to ask whether there are firearms in the homes where their children play.

National ASK Day is proclaimed by the Asking Saves Kids campaign to remind parents to ask, " Is there a gun where my child plays?"

In Kansas, 38 percent of households report having firearms in or around their home. Each year, in the United States, approximately 60 children ages 14 and under are killed by accidental gunshots and more than 730 go to the emergency room with injuries from gun-related accidents — not counting approximately 6,600 injured in accidents involving BB guns and other air-powered guns.

"Kids should not have access to guns," says Jan Stegelman, Safe Kids Kansas coordinator. "More than half of the parents surveyed who own guns and have children ages 4-12 said they keep a loaded or unlocked gun in the home."

According to a 2002 survey commissioned by the ASK campaign, 97 percent of parents who own guns "would not feel uncomfortable if asked about the presence of a gun in their home by another parent," yet 53 percent of parents said they had never asked. "Parents should ask the adults in any homes their children visit whether there's a gun in the home and whether it is locked up where children can't get to it," says Stegelman.

Safe gun storage means:

* Guns unloaded and ammunition locked up in a separate place

* Guns locked in a safe or lockbox or fitted with a trigger lock

* Keys or combinations to gun locks and ammo boxes stored out of reach of children

* BB guns, pellet guns and other air- or spring-powered guns stored the same way as firearms

Also, says Stegelman, "Teach kids not to touch a gun and to tell an adult if they find one. Most kids cannot tell the difference between a real handgun and a realistic-looking toy."

source:www.emaxhealth.com

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