Firearm Injury Clinical Trials

10 recruiting

Firearm Injury Trials at a Glance

10 actively recruiting trials for firearm injury are listed on ClinicalTrialsFinder across 6 cities. The largest study group is Not Applicable with 9 trials, with the heaviest enrollment activity in Ann Arbor, Aurora, and Houston. Lead sponsors running firearm injury studies include The University of Texas Health Science Center, Houston, University of Michigan, and Vanderbilt University Medical Center.

Browse firearm injury trials by phase

About Firearm Injury Clinical Trials

Looking for clinical trials for Firearm Injury? There are currently 10 studies actively recruiting participants. Clinical trials offer access to new treatments before they are widely available, and every approved therapy in use today was first tested through a clinical trial.

Below you can browse trials, sign up for alerts when new Firearm Injury trials open, and view eligibility criteria for each study. Each listing includes the study phase, locations, and enrollment details.

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about Firearm Injury clinical trials

A clinical trial is a carefully designed research study that tests new medical treatments, drugs, devices, or approaches in human volunteers. Every approved medication and treatment available today was proven safe and effective through clinical trials.

All clinical trials are reviewed and approved by Institutional Review Boards (IRBs) — independent committees that evaluate patient safety. Trials follow strict protocols, and your health is monitored closely throughout. You can withdraw at any time.

Not necessarily. Many trials compare the new treatment against the current standard of care, meaning all participants receive active treatment. When placebos are used, they are typically combined with standard treatment, not given alone. The trial description will always specify the design.

Under the Affordable Care Act, most private insurers are required to cover routine patient care costs during a clinical trial. The sponsor typically covers the investigational treatment itself. Medicare also covers routine costs for qualifying trials.

Yes. Participation is completely voluntary. You can withdraw at any time, for any reason, without it affecting your access to standard medical care.

Each trial has specific eligibility criteria — including age, diagnosis, disease stage, prior treatments, and general health. Browse the trials listed above and check their eligibility sections. You can also contact the trial site directly to discuss your situation.

Showing 110 of 10 trials

Recruiting
Not Applicable

HVIP Outcomes and Stakeholder Insights

Firearm InjuryViolence, Physical
Medical University of South Carolina220 enrolled1 locationNCT06582953
Recruiting
Not Applicable

TRUsted rEsidents and Housing Assistance to Decrease Violence Exposure in New Haven

Firearm Injury
Yale University61,770 enrolled7 locationsNCT05723614
Recruiting
Not Applicable

Store Safely: Rural Firearm Injury Prevention for Families

Firearm Injury
University of Michigan600 enrolled2 locationsNCT06719713
Recruiting
Not Applicable

Launching the Houston Hospital-Based Violence Intervention Program (Houston-HVIP): Developing and Evaluating a Hospital-Based Intervention to Reduce Recurrent Violence

Firearm Injury
The University of Texas Health Science Center, Houston274 enrolled1 locationNCT06263647
Recruiting
Not Applicable

Target Safety: a Collaboration of Firearm Retailers and Health Care to Address Suicide Prevention

Firearm InjurySuicide Due to Use of Firearm
The University of Texas Health Science Center, Houston240 enrolled1 locationNCT07223970
Recruiting
Not Applicable

BeSMART Secure Storage Counseling in the Inpatient Setting

Safety IssuesFirearm Injury
Vanderbilt University Medical Center400 enrolled2 locationsNCT06485141
Recruiting

Addressing Root Causes for Gun Violence Prevention (ARC-GVP)

AggressionAdolescentViolence+1 more
University of Michigan250 enrolled1 locationNCT05887973
Recruiting
Not Applicable

Safer Storage Safer Homes An Inpatient Pediatric Lethal Means Counseling Pilot Trial

Firearm InjuryHospitalizations Psychiatric
Vanderbilt University Medical Center180 enrolled1 locationNCT06479889
Recruiting
Not Applicable

Recovery Legal Care Clinical Trial

Injury TraumaticFirearm InjuryRacism, Systemic+1 more
University of Chicago500 enrolled1 locationNCT06618794
Recruiting
Not Applicable

Project Safe Guard-Trauma

PTSDSuicide PreventionFirearm Injury+1 more
University of Colorado, Denver168 enrolled1 locationNCT06876740