If its not about crime and fatalities... Even now after Orlando, absolutely nobody is worried about gun accidents and suicides.
Not... not so much. There is a great number of suicide prevention organizations out there that would disagree with the latter, and so far as I'm aware getting firearms away from those identified as suicidally depressed is pretty common practice and given a fair amount of emphasis, even beyond all the rest involved with that. There is a great number of gun control advocates in the US that would disagree with the former; it's been a substantial chunk of the point behind local advocacy for gun safes and firearm storage regulation of the last few decades. Certainly neither get much news coverage, because, y'know, one side of this issue is throwing a lot more money at it (among other things, of course... suicide in general doesn't get nearly as much attention as it probably should in the US, no doubt in part due to our continuing attempts to stick our fingers in our ears and whistle dixie about mental health issues), but there is a hell of a lot of people that are, in fact, worried about gun accidents and suicides, particularly the latter, and have been for quite a long time.
EDIT: Reelya, I provided very detailed statistics from an official source for England and Wales' homicides and violent crime on page 4 or 5 or something. There is NO CHANGE in gun use % in homicides since the law change, and the total homicide rate is on a rise still.
Doesn't look like it? Not on the total, at least. Homicide rate's been dropping pretty steadily in england and wales since a peak in '02. Both the rate and the raw number have actually been dropping (though the rate more slowly), near as I've been able to tell, and a good chunk of that peak in '02 was actually due to extraordinary events (~ a tenth of; 172 of 1041 were attributed to a single person and recorded in that year).
This seems to be the data they're drawing from, if you're like to check something closer to the source. Gun use in % of homicides also seems to be down from a decade ago by a bit, and not spiking as high to boot.
This looks to be just about the best summary of data I've found yet, insofar as presentation and ease of use, though I can't speak for the rest of the site in the least.
Actually think the suicide rates data is more interesting, though; both are lower than the earliest point they were both tracked in that data, but total is down significantly more than just firearm. Considering one of the common statements is that reducing firearm access reduces total suicides beyond just lowering gun ones... though the data
is a few years out of date, and iirc the UK's having a bit of a suicide spike at the moment. Could be outdated to some degree.