The authors of a recent study are calling for tighter gun-control laws after they found that nearly one in 10 Americans self-reported patterns of violent behavior and also own guns at home or carry firearms when they travel.
Americans who have both a history of impulsive, angry behavior and access to at least one firearm at home comprise 8.9% of the population, according to the study, published Wednesday in Behavioral Sciences and the Law, a peer-reviewed journal. Almost 1.5% of the population — 4.8 million people — have anger issues and carry guns outside of their homes.
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Since only a small proportion of people with disorders and access to firearms are hospitalized involuntarily for mental health problems, most individuals aren’t subject to legal restrictions on firearms. As a result, the authors of the study are calling for the revision of gun-control laws. They suggest, for example, that firearms laws take behavioral risk into account by expanding the definition of gun-prohibited individuals to include people with violent misdemeanor convictions.
The study, based on analysis of interviews with 5,000 adults between 2001 and 2003, in which participants answered questions about their behaviors and gun ownership, comes as mental health issues have emerged as a major focus of the debate over gun control.









