Skip to content

Everytown Releases New Research Highlighting 2023 as Worst Year for Unintentional Shootings by Children, Tennessee Saw 158 Incidents of Unintentional Shootings by Children from 2015-2023

3.21.2024

NASHVILLE, TN — Everytown for Gun Safety has released new data highlighting the devastating rise in unintentional shootings by children, finding that 2023 had the highest number of incidents since Everytown started tracking them in 2015. In fact, the annual number of unintentional shootings by children surpassed 400 for the first time since Everytown began its tracking. Everytown’s research also shows that Tennessee saw 158 unintentional shootings by children from 2015-2023, the 3rd highest rate of any state over that period.

Tennessee currently has the 12th highest rate of gun deaths in the United States and some of the weakest gun laws in the country. Tennessee lacks any law requiring gun owners to securely store their firearms, and legislators in the state have recently weakened the state’s policies, eliminating the carry permitting requirement, and allowing nearly anyone in the state to carry loaded firearms in public, concealed or open, without a background check, permit, or safety training. After the school shooting at the Covenant School in Nashville in 2023, lawmakers failed to pass any meaningful gun safety legislation and instead strengthened protections for the gun industry.

Roughly once every day in the United States, a child under the age of 18 gains access to a loaded gun and unintentionally shoots themself or someone else. Everytown’s #NotAnAccident Index is a unique database that has tracked more than 3,200 of these shootings by children from 2015 to 2023, resulting in more than 1,200 people killed and more than 2,000 people wounded. 

“I became a pediatrician because I care about the health and happiness of children. I was trained not only to treat illnesses and trauma but also to prevent disease and injuries before they occur,” said Dr. Kelsey Gastineau, a pediatrician, volunteer with Moms Demand Action, and volunteer for the Be SMART program in Tennessee. “Sometimes, trips to the hospital are unavoidable. The difference with gun violence is that it can be prevented through secure gun storage.” 

Key findings from the new data include:

  • The two age groups most likely to unintentionally shoot themself or others are high schoolers between the ages of 14 and 17, followed by preschoolers ages five and younger.
  • The victims of shootings by children are most often also children. Over nine in 10 of those wounded or killed in unintentional shootings by children were also under 18 years old.
  • Nearly one in every three unintentional shooters were five years old and younger. Over one thousand toddlers and preschoolers since 2015 have come upon a loaded firearm and shot themself or someone else.   
  • When children unintentionally shoot another person, the victim is most often a sibling or a friend.
  • More than seven in 10 unintentional child shootings occur in or around homes.
  • Unintentional shootings occur most frequently at times when children are likely to be home: over the weekend and in the summer.
  • Handguns account for the bulk of gun types accessed by children in unintentional shootings. 
  • The states with the highest rates of unintentional shootings by children — Louisiana, Mississippi, Tennessee, Missouri, and Alabama — have weak or no firearm storage laws, while the states with the lowest rates all have storage laws — Rhode Island, Hawaii, New Hampshire, Massachusetts, and California.
  • 2023 saw the highest number of incidents (411), injuries (270) and total victims (427).

This one-of-a-kind dataset allows us to identify solutions. Knowing that these shootings largely occur in and around homes and on weekends and over the summer—when children are likely to be home—points to secure firearm storage as a critical answer. Unintentional shootings by children are not accidents, as they are almost always preventable with secure firearm storage practices, awareness, and policies. These avoidable tragedies cause physical and emotional suffering that persists far beyond the initial incident and leave scars on people far beyond the immediate families of those involved. 

Research shows the most effective way to prevent an unintentional shooting is to make sure firearms are stored as securely as possible. That means unloaded, locked, and separate from ammunition. Firearms are not stored securely when they’re placed in an unlocked dresser or nightstand drawer, under a couch cushion, mattress, or pillow, in an unlocked closet, on a high shelf or on top of the refrigerator. 

Be SMART, a program of Everytown for Gun Safety Support Fund, helps parents and other adults normalize conversations about gun safety and take responsible actions that can prevent child gun deaths and injuries, youth suicide, and gunfire on school grounds. 

The program encourages parents and adults to: 

  • Secure all guns in their home and vehicles
  • Model responsible behavior around guns
  • Ask about the presence of unsecured guns in other homes
  • Recognize the role of guns in suicide
  • Tell your peers to be SMART

Gun owners must store all of their guns securely at all times; parents need to ask about guns and gun storage at any home their children will be visiting; schools, the medical community, gun shops and gun storage device sellers, and others play a vital role in educating the community about secure gun storage; and community members need to support laws that research has shown are effective in holding adults accountable for failing to store their firearms securely. Read more on solutions to this devastating trend here. For more information on secure firearm storage and the most effective ways to protect children from unsecured firearms, visit BeSMARTforkids.org.

In an average year, 1,385 people die by guns in Tennessee, and 2,697 more are wounded. With a rate of 20.5 deaths per 100,000 people, Tennessee has the 12th-highest rate of gun deaths in the US. Guns are the leading cause of death among children and teens in Georgia.