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This policy is a revision of the policy posted on March 1, 1987.

TECHNICAL REPORT

PEDIATRICS Vol. 114 No. 5 November 2004, pp. 1357-1361 (doi:10.1542/peds.2004-1799)
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TECHNICAL REPORT

Injury Risk of Nonpowder Guns

Danielle Laraque, MD and Committee on Injury, Violence, and Poison Prevention

ABSTRACT

Nonpowder guns (ball-bearing [BB] guns, pellet guns, air rifles, paintball guns) continue to cause serious injuries to children and adolescents. The muzzle velocity of these guns can range from approximately 150 ft/second to 1200 ft/second (the muzzle velocities of traditional firearm pistols are 750 ft/second to 1450 ft/second). Both low- and high-velocity nonpowder guns are associated with serious injuries, and fatalities can result from high-velocity guns. A persisting problem is the lack of medical recognition of the severity of injuries that can result from these guns, including penetration of the eye, skin, internal organs, and bone. Nationally, in 2000, there were an estimated 21840 (coefficient of variation: 0.0821) injuries related to nonpowder guns, with approximately 4% resulting in hospitalization. Between 1990 and 2000, the US Consumer Product Safety Commission reported 39 nonpowder gun–related deaths, of which 32 were children younger than 15 years. The introduction of high-powered air rifles in the 1970s has been associated with approximately 4 deaths per year. The advent of war games and the use of paintball guns have resulted in a number of reports of injuries, especially to the eye. Injuries associated with nonpowder guns should receive prompt medical management similar to the management of firearm-related injuries, and nonpowder guns should never be characterized as toys.

Key Words: nonpowder guns • BB guns • pellet guns • air rifles • paintball guns

Abbreviations: BB, ball bearing • CPSC, US Consumer Product Safety Commission • NEISS, National Electronic Injury Surveillance System • EPD, eye-protective device • ASTM, American Society for Testing and Materials



The following policy statement has been revised:

Injuries Related to "Toy" Firearms
Committee on Accident and Poison Prevention
Pediatrics 1987 79: 473-474. [Abstract] [PDF]



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