Connecticut

  • Suicides make up 61% of all firearm deaths in Connecticut.
  • Nearly 30% of suicides in Connecticut are by firearm.
  • In 2019, there were 118 firearm suicide deaths in Connecticut.
  • Connecticut’s firearm suicide rate is lower than most states’ — in 2019, Connecticut had the 6th lowest firearm suicide rate in the country.

Data

Firearm Deaths in Connecticut
2010-2019

Number of deaths

Suicide
Homicide
Other

The “other” category is defined as any firearm death that is not defined by the CDC as a homicide or a suicide. This could include unintentional, undetermined, and legal intervention. To obtain the number of deaths in the “other” category, the total number of firearm suicide deaths and firearm homicide deaths were subtracted from the overall firearm deaths in a given year.

Firearm Suicide Rates in Connecticut and the United States
2010-2019

Age-adjusted rate per 100,000

Connecticut
United States
 

Demographics

The majority of suicide decedents are males. In Connecticut, White males in particular are disproportionately impacted by firearm suicide. Black males have the second highest firearm suicide rate in the state.

Firearm Suicide Deaths in Connecticut by Sex
2015-2019

Female
Male

Firearm Suicide Rates in Connecticut by Sex, Race, and Ethnicity
2015-2019

Age-adjusted rate per 100,000

Male
Female

The CDC considers firearm suicide rates based on fewer than 20 deaths “statistically unreliable” and suppresses firearm suicide rates based on fewer than 10 deaths. Fewer than 20 firearm suicides were reported during this time period for the following races and Hispanic Origin category and therefore are omitted from the above chart: American Indian/ Alaska Native females and males, Asian/ Pacific Islander females and males, Black females, and Hispanic/Latino females.

 

County Variations

Firearm Suicide Rates by County
2010-2019

Age-Adjusted Firearm Suicide Rate per 100,000

  • 2.01 to 2.61
  • 2.62 to 3.22
  • 3.23 to 3.83
  • 3.84 to 4.59
  • Suppressed /
    Unreliable

The CDC suppresses data in which fewer than 10 deaths are reported in a given time frame and considers firearm suicide rates based on fewer than 20 deaths “statistically unreliable.” Counties that meet this criteria are labeled “Suppressed/Unreliable.”

Notes:

  • The most recently available CDC data is 2019; as such, 2019 data is used where appropriate.
  • Unless otherwise specified, statistics reflect 5-year averages (2015-2019).
  • All rates listed are age-adjusted in order to allow for accurate comparisons between populations with differing age distributions.

Source: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, National Center for Health Statistics. Suicide Deaths and Rates per 100,000. WONDER Online Database, 1999-2019. Available: http://wonder.cdc.gov/ucd-icd10.html.

 

This page was last updated March 2021.