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. Author manuscript; available in PMC: 2013 Jun 27.
Published in final edited form as: Am J Prev Med. 2005 Jan;28(1):109–115. doi: 10.1016/j.amepre.2004.09.013

Table 2.

Household storage of poisonous substances and firearms, by whether young children live in or only visit the home, United States, 2002

Storage practice Children aged
<6 live in
homea n (%)b
Children aged
<6 only visit
home n (%)b
OR (95% CI)c
Total 157/157 (100) 480/480 (100)
Poisons
    Medicines in the open 27/157 (18) 183/480 (38) 2.89 (1.84–4.54)
    Medicines unlocked 122/157 (78) 400/479 (83) 1.40 (0.89–2.19)
    Medicines in a purse/pocketbook 50/153 (33) 218/476 (46) 1.74 (1.18–2.54)
    Household chemicals unlocked 85/157 (55) 354/480 (74) 2.33 (1.60–3.39)
    Shop or garden chemicals
      Present 76/156 (49) 252/480 (52) 1/16 (0.81–1.66)
      Present and unlockedd 43/75 (58) 144/244 (59) 1.04 (0.62–1.76)
Firearms
    Present 50/153 (33) 159/469 (34) 1.06 (0.72–1.57)
    Present and not all locked upe 16/50 (33)   88/157 (56) 2.57 (1.32–5.03)
a

Households where children live may or may not have children visiting.

b

Denominators in certain cells may vary due to missing data. Frequencies and percentages are based on weighted data.

c

Odds of the storage practice in households with children aged <6 visiting versus living in home.

d

This question was restricted to households where shop/garden chemicals were present.

e

This question was restricted to households where firearms were present.

CI, confidence interval; OR, odds ratio.