Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT05257837

Follow-up Gun Study: Can Safety Videos Mitigate Interest in Guns in Children?

A Gun Safety Video Can Reduce Children's Unsafe Behavior Around Real Guns: A Randomized Clinical Trial

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
245 (actual)
Sponsor
Ohio State University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
8 Years – 12 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

The investigators' previous research has shown that children exposed to media characters with guns in movies and video games are more likely to use real guns themselves (e.g., touch them, hold them, pull the trigger). This research tests whether exposure to a gun safety video a week before the study can help counteract dangerous behavior around guns.

Detailed description

Guns are prominent in movies that target children. An analysis of top selling films found that the depiction of guns in violent scenes in PG-13 films that target youth has increased from the level of G and PG files in 1985 when the rating was introduced, to the level of R films by 2005, to exceed the level of R films since 2012, a trend that has continued. Research in the investigator's lab has shown that children are more likely to use guns (e.g., handle them, pull the trigger) after exposure to movie characters who use guns. The investigators replicated this study using video games, and also found that children who had taken a gun safety course were less likely to engage in dangerous behavior around firearms. However, it is difficult to draw causal inferences about the gun safety course because children were not randomly assigned to take or not take a gun safety course. The present research will aim to reduce dangerous behavior around firearms by first exposing participants to a gun safety video recorded by The Ohio State University Chief of Police. The control video is about car safety. Children will see the videos about a week before they come into the lab. In the lab, children will be tested in pairs. They will first watch a film clip from one of two different PG rated films, either in its original form (with guns) or with the guns edited out. After exposure to the film, participants will be placed in a room with toys, including two real unloaded guns that have been modified for safety and include a trigger pull counter. The study uses 2 (gun safety video vs. car safety video) X 2 (movie with guns vs. movie without guns) between-subjects factorial design. The investigators predict that children will be less likely to engage in dangerous behavior around real firearms after viewing the gun safety video than those who viewed the car safety video, even if they see a movie with guns in the lab.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALGun handling behaviorChildren will play in an observed room for 20 minutes. Aside from a selection of toys, two real handguns will be placed in a drawer. The handguns have been modified so they cannot fire. Inside the magazine, the handgun contains no bullets. Instead, it contains a sensor that counts the number of times the trigger is pulled with sufficient force to discharge the gun. This allows us to distinguish reliably the children who pull the trigger from those who handle the gun but do not pull the trigger
OTHERDebriefingChildren and their parents will be debriefed on the actual purpose of the study, including the role of the safety video and how the movie clips were edited.

Timeline

Start date
2022-02-02
Primary completion
2022-10-16
Completion
2022-10-16
First posted
2022-02-25
Last updated
2024-11-20
Results posted
2024-11-20

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05257837. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.