Firearm Injury Prevention in Rural Settings

WSU works in partnership with the Firearm Injury & Policy Research Program at the University of Washington to understand firearm-related culture, experiences, and behaviors among rural adolescents and families. Long-term, this work informs firearm injury prevention and safety promotion efforts.

Logo with mountain and words.

In the Youth Experiences in Rural Washington: Research on Firearm Safety project, we conducted a mixed methods study collecting qualitative (focus group or interview) and quantitative (survey) data from 93 rural youth across Washington State. Using a community-based participatory research process, we engaged WSU Extension 4-H Youth Development as community partners in each step from the grant proposal through dissemination of findings. This project was funded by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Logo of mountains for the Family Experiences in Rural Washington: Research on Firearm Safety project.

In the Family Experiences in Rural Washington: Research on Firearm Safety project, Drs. Hall and Weybright conducted a qualitative study conducting interviews with the parents of rural youth from our prior study to understand their perspective on rural firearm culture and practices within the home. This project was funded by the Grandmothers Against Gun Violence Foundation.

WSU Extension faculty and staff collaborators include Dr. Ashley Hall, Dr. Gary Varrella, Toni Gwin, and Linda McLean. We appreciate the support of the WSU 4-H Youth Development program.


Research Briefs and Project Updates

Access research brief and project update files here if not otherwise linked below.

Model depicting mixed methods research design.
This project update describes our study design.
Image describing study participants.
This project update describes our youth participants.
Image describing considerations for recruitment.
This research brief describes considerations for recruiting rural adolescents in firearms research.
Research brief on firearm terminology.
This research brief describes preferred firearm-related terminology among rural adolescents.
Project summary description including purpose and need for research, participants, and questions asked.
This research brief describes the Family Experiences in Rural Washington: Research on Firearm Safety project design.

News

November 2025

Drs. Weybright presented on behalf of the research team at the 2025 National Research Conference for the Prevention of Firearm-Related Harms. The poster was titled Secure Storage in Rural Homes: Gaps Between Firearm Safety Ideals and Practices.

One person gesturing and speaking to another person in front of a poster on the wall.
Dr. Weybright discussing the poster with an attendee of the conference.

October 2025

Drs. Weybright and Hall presented the process and findings of the Family Experiences in Rural Washington: Research on Firearm Safety project to the Grandmothers Against Gun Violence Foundation who funded this work. This lunch and learn webinar will be available on the foundation’s website.

Image of title slide for presentation "Firearm safety practices of rural families in Washington State"

September 2025

Dr. Weybright and colleagues have a new publication, Trends in firearm death among middle and high-school aged rural and urban adolescents from 2001 to 2022, available in the journal Injury Epidemiology. This publication looks at trends in overall injury death and specifically firearm injury death among middle and high school rural and urban adolescents. Research was highlighted in a related press release and in the media.

May 2025

Dr. Weybright and colleagues, including prevention science graduate student Madeline Fodor, presented two symposia at this year’s Society for Prevention Research.

The first symposium was titled Carrying in Context: Motivations and Access to Information as Predictors of Firearm Behavior. Dr. Weybright’s presentation was titled Understanding Firearm Carrying Perceptions and Behaviors Among Rural Adolescents. Dr. Margaret Kuklinski, Professor and Director of the Social Development Research Group at University of Washington, served as discussant.

Person standing at podium, next to a projected slide.
Margaret Kuklinski, PhD, served as discussant for one symposium.

The second symposium was titled Handgun Attitudes and Behaviors Among Youth and Young Adults with Diverse Identities: Risk, Protection, and Pathways to Carrying. This symposium was awarded a conference abstract of distinction.

  • Dr. Weybright’s presentation was titled Pathways to Handgun Carrying Among Rural Adolescents: Findings from a Qualitative Comparative Analysis.
  • Madeline Fodor, prevention science graduate student, gave a presentation titled “I’ve got mixed feelings”: A qualitative inquiry of handgun use and perceptions among transgender, non-binary, and gender-diverse young adults.
  • Dr. Ali Rowhani-Rahbar, Bartley Dobb Professor for the Study and Prevention of Violence and Director of the Firearm Injury Policy & Research Program at the University of Washington, served as discussant.

December 2024

Dr. Weybright and colleagues, including prevention science graduate student Madeline Fodor, presented at this year’s National Research Conference for the Prevention of Firearm-Related Harms. Presentations included:

  • Do All Roads Lead to Rome? Use of Qualitative Comparative Analysis to Identify Pathways to Handgun Carrying Among Rural Adolescents
  • Use of a Community-Based Participatory Approach to Understanding the Cultural Context of Firearms Among Rural Adolescents
  • The Role of Families and Parents in the Situational Context of Rural Adolescent Handgun Carrying
  • Handgun Perceptions and Use Among Transgender, Non-Binary, and Gender Diverse Young Adults
Two people talking in front of a large research poster.
Graduate student, Madeline Fodor, presenting a poster at the meeting.

October 2024

New findings from the project are published! Dr. Weybright and colleagues have published a manuscript titled Firearm Experiences, Behaviors, and Norms Among Rural Adolescents in JAMA Network Open. Find the article here. A related research brief is here.

Image of a research brief titled firearm experiences, behaviors, and norms among rural adolescents.
Research brief describing firearm related social norms among rural adolescents.

August 2024

Dr. Weybright and colleagues have published a manuscript titled Conceptualization of Firearm-Related Terms among Rural Adolescents: Definitions Matter in Youth & Society. Find article here. A related research brief is available in the project updates listed above.

Research brief on firearm terminology.
Research brief on firearm terminology.

July 2024

Dr. Weybright and colleague Dr. Ashley Hall have received a grant from the Grandmothers Against Gun Violence Foundation to continue and expand project work by speaking with the parents of youth who participated in our study. Read more about this work here.

January 2024

Dr. Weybright and colleagues have published a manuscript titled Strategies for recruiting adolescents in rural areas in firearm injury research in Injury Prevention. Find article here. A related research brief is available in the project updates listed above.

Image describing considerations for recruitment.
Research brief on recruitment considerations.

November 2023

Dr. Weybright and colleagues from WSU Extension and University of Washington gave a presentation titled Handgun experiences and behaviors among rural adolescents: A convergent mixed methods study at the 2023 National Research Conference for the Prevention of Firearm-related Harms.

Image of presentation title slide.
Presentation title slide.

April 2023

Dr. Weybright presented at the National Public Health Week symposium and networking reception in Spokane. This was hosted by the Washington State Public Health Association and WSU Spokane.

February 2023

Gavin Mina and Rittick Nandy, both undergraduate students at Washington State University, co-presented a poster titled Handgun Carrying Behaviors Among rural Adolescents: Implications for Prevention at the 2023 Prevention Science Graduate Student Organization poster session. Gavin and Rittick both graduated in May, 2023. 

Undergraduate students presenting a poster at the PSGSO poster session.
Gavin Mina (left) and Rittick Nandy (right) presenting their poster.

November 2022

Dr. Weybright and colleagues from Extension (Hernandez Hall, Varrella) as well as University of Washington (Rowhani-Rahbar) presented a poster on rural adolescents definition of firearm-related terms at the inaugural 2022 National Research Conference on Firearm Injury Prevention in Washington, DC.

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Poster on conceptualization of common firearm-related terms.

Publications

Publications from the broader project are listed below.


This project was supported by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) as part of a financial assistance award totaling $1,432,559 funded by CDC/HHS and $32,000 funded by the Grandmothers Against Gun Violence Foundation, a non-governmental source. The contents are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily represent the official views of, nor an endorsement, by CDC/HHS, or the U.S. Government.