Daniel Webster (academic)

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Born1960 (age 6566)
AlmamaterUniversity of Michigan, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
AwardsDelta Omega Honorary Society in Public Health – Alpha chapter, faculty induction, 2005; Educator of the Year, Maryland Network Against Domestic Violence, 2004
Daniel W. Webster
Born1960 (age 6566)
Alma materUniversity of Michigan, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health
AwardsDelta Omega Honorary Society in Public Health – Alpha chapter, faculty induction, 2005; Educator of the Year, Maryland Network Against Domestic Violence, 2004
Scientific career
FieldsPublic health, health policy
InstitutionsJohns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health

Daniel W. Webster (born 1960)[1] is an American health policy researcher and the distinguished research scholar of the Johns Hopkins Center for Gun Violence Solutions (formerly known as the Center for Gun Policy and Research) at Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. He is also the deputy director for research at the Johns Hopkins Center for the Prevention of Youth Violence, and the first Bloomberg Professor of American Health at the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health.[2][3] In 2016, he became the director of the Johns Hopkins-Baltimore Collaborative for Violence Reduction, a joint crime-fighting effort between Johns Hopkins and the Baltimore Police Department.[4]

Webster received his MPH from the University of Michigan in 1985 and his ScD from the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in 1990.[2] His ScD thesis was entitled, Determinants of pediatricians' firearm injury prevention counseling practices.[5]

Research

Webster is known for his research into gun violence and laws, and he has published numerous articles on these and related subjects.[2] In 2015, he and his colleagues published a study that found that the passage of a permit-to-purchase (PTP) handgun law in Connecticut was associated with a 40% reduction in firearm homicides in the state in the ten years after the law's enactment in 1995.[6][7] Later that year, Webster co-authored another study looking at changes in such laws in Connecticut and Missouri, the latter of which repealed its permit-to-purchase law in 2007.

This study found that the enactment of Connecticut's PTP law was associated with a 15.4% reduction in firearm suicide rates in the state, while Missouri's repeal of its PTP law was associated with a 16.1% increase in these rates.[8][9] A previous study by Webster et al. had found that the repeal of Missouri's PTP law was associated with increased annual murders of 0.93 per 100,000 people, or about 55 to 63 per year.[10][11][12] In October 2016, he and his Johns Hopkins colleagues released a report claiming that arguments in support of campus carry laws are based on flawed assumptions, and that such laws could make college campuses less safe.[13]

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