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How Doctors Can Help Prevent Gun Violence

HBR HBR
By HBR HBR
8 Min Read
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A year ago, the National Rifle Association tweeted that “self-important anti-gun doctors” should “stay in their lane.” Thousands of physicians and other health care professionals responded with graphic pictures and stories that underscored why the prevention and treatment of firearm injury is very much “in our lane.” In the week after the tweet, the hashtag #ThisIsOurLane went viral, an open letter in response to the NRA from physicians and their colleagues with the American Foundation for Firearm Injury Reduction in Medicine (Affirm Research) attracted over 40,000 signatures, and physician leaders of the movement — including the two of us — found themselves with an unexpected platform to advocate for change. Our work to reframe the debate about firearm injury prevention has accelerated. But there is still far to go.

Last fall, the American College of Physicians — one of the country’s largest physician organizations — updated a position paper outlining its recommendations for firearm injury prevention. It was this new paper that provoked the NRA tweet. And when the NRA tweeted, the doctors and nurses and medics who had been working to restart the public health approach were ready.

We were already tired of taking care of victims and of being told that there was nothing we could do to stop their coming through our doors. We were already tired of seeing our communities caught in endless cycles of violence. We were already tired of seeing our own colleagues injured and killed, be it by suicide or domestic violence or as first responders. We were already tired of the emotional toll of this epidemic. And this tweet reminded us just how much our experiences mattered. We responded en masse with impassioned speeches and op-eds, and with unified fundraising efforts in honor of our patients and colleagues.

Given new energy by the #ThisIsOurLane hashtag in the past year, many of these efforts have grown in strength and power. The American College of Surgeons held an interdisciplinary summit of more than 40 medical and public health organizations, in which they restated their joint commitment to the public health approach. In the glaring absence of substantial federal funding, private funding for firearm injury research has increased by more than 300%, with the National Collaborative on Gun Violence Research, Kaiser Permanente and Affirm Research together creating dozens of new projects that would not have been possible without it.

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Physician education and guideline development has also accelerated: The American Medical Association launched a free online program, UC Davis developed the “What You Can Do” initiative and the National Institutes of Health-funded Facts consortium and Johns Hopkins both launched online curricula. Hospital systems and states are also taking action: New Jersey funded a major research consortium, the governors of several states have committed to collaborative research, California is slated to fund a statewide medical education curriculum and Washington State has funded a new research program at the University of Washington-Harborview. In the past year, approximately $15 million has been newly committed.

We’re also seeing an important new development: These efforts are being welcomed beyond the medical community. Staying true to the public health approach, this work is engaging all of those affected by the epidemic, including gun owners, minority youth, domestic violence survivors and school administrators. New initiatives such as the Colorado Firearm Safety Coalition’s online map showing where people can legally store guns outside of the home if any occupants are at risk of injury and Affirm’s collaboration with firearm-training instructors are two of dozens of examples. Other efforts — like the Health Alliance for Violence Intervention — have gained in strength. And the American College of Surgeons’ Stop the Bleed program for out-of-hospital bleeding control has been adopted and delivered to over a million people nationwide.

Finally, the firearm injury prevention movement is increasingly collaborating with business and military to decrease risk. These groups understandably resist initiatives that seem partisan or political. But through the transformative, big-tent approaches outlined above, they have begun to appreciate that we can, indeed, address firearm injury prevention while also respecting the culture of our communities. This movement — which includes but is not limited to the #ThisIsOurLane hashtag — is not Democratic or Republican, and it’s not anti-gun. It’s anti-firearm-injury. Many of the physicians involved own guns. The focus is on stopping shootings before they happen and on saving lives.

Although we applaud private funders and individual donors, we need a much greater investment to address this epidemic. Traditionally, the public health response has been led by the federal government, including the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the NIH. While the NIH is now funding firearm research (albeit without dedicated funds or programs), the CDC is still silenced. In September the Senate declined to include the House’s request for $50 million to fund firearm injury prevention research in their health appropriations bill.

In the meantime, we and our organizations will work collaboratively with private groups to jump-start the necessary response. We draw parallels to our work from the early HIV/AIDS response. Long before the NIH dedicated funds to researching the prevention and treatment of HIV/AIDS, private groups like the Ryan White Foundation and the Rock Hudson Foundation provided funding. Health care groups are now doing the same, supporting private initiatives while we push the government to act.

There is no single solution to this epidemic, and there is much work to be done. But without continued commitment to implementing what we already know works — and to researching what we don’t yet know — we will not make further progress. Critical next steps include health care systems working with those of us with firearm injury prevention expertise to teach best practices to health care providers; continuing to pressure the federal government to provide funding; and continuing to work closely with affected communities to staunch the frequency of and impact of shootings. It also includes working with electronic health record companies, the technology and insurance industries, and the larger business community to collect and analyze data. Our patients and our communities deserve better than a haphazard approach to the epidemic. We need data-driven solutions.

If we have learned anything over the past year, it’s the power of the “white coat” to encourage good science, adequate funding and a sustained, comprehensive public health approach to firearm injury prevention. We are enthused by the medical community’s acceleration, but we need the support of the private community and of government to ensure that we don’t run out of gas before we reach the finish line.

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