Cross-State Relationship of Firearm Violence Between Police and Civilians: Gun Ownership as a Common Denominator.
Jain V, Hemenway D.
J Urban Health. 2024 Oct. 101(5):951-954. PMID: 39196466
Professor of Health Policy
Health Policy and Management
Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health
David Hemenway, Ph.D., Professor of Health Policy, is Director of the Harvard Injury Control Research Center. He formerly spent a week each year at the University of Vermont as a James Marsh Visiting Professor-at-Large.
Dr. Hemenway teaches classes on injury and on economics. At HSPH he has won ten teaching awards as well as the inaugural community engagement award.
Dr. Hemenway has written widely on injury prevention, including articles on firearms, violence, suicide, child abuse, motor vehicle crashes, fires, falls and fractures. He headed the pilot for the National Violent Death Reporting System, which provides detailed and comparable information on suicide and homicide. In 2012 he was recognized by the Centers for Disease Control & Prevention as one of the "twenty most influential injury and violence professionals over the past twenty years."
In articles on insurance, Dr. Hemenway described a general reason why low-risk individuals often buy insurance, and coined the term "propitious selection." Recent economic studies have focused on empirically determining which goods are more and less positional (e.g., bought largely to "keep up with the Joneses"). An early statistics article, Why Your Classes are Larger than Average, has been anthologized in various mathematical collections.
Dr. Hemenway has written five books. Industrywide Voluntary Product Standards (1975) describes the role of voluntary standards and standardization in the U.S. economy. Monitoring and Compliance: the Political Economy of Inspection (1985) describes the importance of inspection processes in ensuring that regulations are followed, and the reasons the system often fails. Prices and Choices (3rd edition) (1993) is a collection of twenty-six of his original essays applying microeconomic theory to everyday life.
Private Guns Public Health (2006, 2017) describes the public health approach to reducing firearm violence, and summarizes the scientific studies on the firearms and health.
While You Were Sleeping: Success Stories in Injury and Violence Prevention (2009) describes more than sixty successes, and over thirty heroes who have made the world safer. This readable book helps answer the questions "What is public health?" and "What is the public health approach?" To read more about this ode to public health, click here for Dr. Hemenway's book blog.
Jain V, Hemenway D.
J Urban Health. 2024 Oct. 101(5):951-954. PMID: 39196466
Hemenway D.
N Engl J Med. 2024 Apr 18. 390(15):1352-1353. PMID: 38624001
Hoover C, Fossa AJ, Ranney ML, Hoover GG, Specht AJ, Hemenway D, Braun JM.
J Pediatr. 2024 Jun. 269:113975. PMID: 38401786
Hemenway D, Peterson EW, Howland J.
Inj Epidemiol. 2023 Dec 21. 10(1):69. PMID: 38129920
Gaffney A, Himmelstein DU, Dickman S, Myers C, Hemenway D, McCormick D, Woolhandler S.
JAMA Netw Open. 2023 06 01. 6(6):e2315578. PMID: 37289459
Hemenway D, Azrael D, Zhang W, Miller M.
J Natl Med Assoc. 2023 Apr 15. PMID: 37069017
Hoover C, Specht AJ, Hemenway D.
Prev Med. 2023 01. 166:107377. PMID: 36493866
Hemenway D, Zhang W.
Prev Med. 2022 12. 165(Pt A):107313. PMID: 36372590
South EC, Hemenway D, Webster DW.
Prev Med. 2022 12. 165(Pt A):107325. PMID: 36374716
Hemenway D, Zhang W.
Prev Med. 2022 11. 164:107261. PMID: 36155840
In the 25 years since Columbine, federal gun laws have been weakened, state laws are a patchwork, and the U.S. still has more gun deaths per capita than any other high-income country. But firearms researcher David Hemenway sees…
No single strategy is likely to significantly reduce gun deaths in the U.S.—but lots of strategies working together could help, according to Harvard Chan School’s David Hemenway.
Researchers at Harvard Chan School have received a five-year, $5 million grant to support research on firearm injuries and deaths.
In Massachusetts towns with more guns, there are more suicides—and blood lead levels in a community appear to play a role in the link, according to a new study from Harvard Chan School.
The relationship between firearms and suicide, as well as firearms injury data, were among the topics of studies from experts at Harvard Chan School that appeared in the December 2022 issue of the journal Preventive Medicine.