Dr. John Lott’s analysis caught a big error in CDC data on accidental gun deaths, that made the number of deaths look 21% larger than it actually was. From Fox News:
The numbers, from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, seemed to show the Volunteer State led the nation in accidental shooting deaths due to a more than five-fold increase in 2014. But an eagle-eyed Second Amendment advocate’s suspicions turned out to be right: The number of accidental deaths had actually dropped, from 19 to just five.
“It was a big mistake,” said John Lott, author of “More Guns, Less Crime,” and president of the Crime Prevention Research Center.
The errant number even skewed national statistics in a major way, he noted.
“It raised total accidental deaths to 586 when they should have been 486, the lowest number on record despite the explosion in gun sales and concealed carry permits,” Lott said.
Lott first pointed the error out to the CDC at the beginning of 2016 but the governmental agency did nothing to correct the report until recently.
“There was a coding error in the 2014 file that increases the number of unintentional firearm deaths (W32-W34: Accidental discharge of firearms) substantially in some states,” reads a caveat recently posted by the CDC. “The error was not technically isolated to any particular state, but because of the nature of the error, data from some states (TN, NC) were affected more than others in 2014. . . .
The rest of the piece is available here.
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