Rebecca M Cunningham1,2, Marc A Zimmerman1, Patrick M Carter2. 1. Department of Health Behavior & Health Education, University of Michigan School of Public Health, Ann Arbor. 2. Department of Emergency Medicine, University of Michigan School of Medicine, Ann Arbor.
Firearm injuries are a significant US public health problem, responsible for
nearly 40 000 deaths annually.[1] In
2017, firearms surpassed motor vehicle crashes and are now second only to opioid and
other drug-related overdoses as the leading cause of injury-related death.[1] One of the most appalling aspects of
this public health tragedy is the toll that such firearm injuries extract on the most
vulnerable populations, particularly children, adolescents, and elderly people. Among
children and adolescents, firearms are the second leading cause of death overall and are
the leading cause of death for African American youth.[2] Among elderly people (≥65 years of age),
firearms are responsible for 70% of the more than 8200 completed suicide attempts every
year.[1] Apart from the human
costs, firearm-related injuries also cost society an estimated $230 billion annually,
considering costs for acute medical care, long-term disability and rehabilitation care,
lost work and productivity, and criminal justice proceedings.[3]Health care professionals experience daily the physical and emotional toll of
firearm-related injury, whether they are emergency medicine or trauma specialists who
care for acutely injured patients in the trauma bay, operating theater, or intensive
care units or the internal medicine, pediatric, family medicine, rehabilitation, or
psychiatry specialists who serve patients and their families dealing with the aftermath
of a firearm injury. The depth of their investment in this issue was recently
demonstrated through the nationwide response to the National Rifle Association’s
(NRA’s) statement admonishing physicians to “stay in their lane”
and avoid commenting on public policies designed to address firearm safety.[4] Health care professionals responded with
social and mass media and journal editorials describing their encounters with patients
injured by firearms. Health care professionals demonstrated that contrary to the NRA
position, they have an undeniably central role and authority in addressing this public
health problem through the direct care that they provide to patients and their families,
prevention-based research, and advocacy for policy-level changes that make patients
safer.Although social media have served as a galvanizing force for the health care
community, national health care organizations such as the ones in the study reported by
Schuur et al[5] also play an important
role to advocate on behalf of their members at the federal and state levels. These
organizations have been silent on the issue of firearm violence, often fearful of
touching what has become a third rail of medical politics. Driven largely by their
memberships’ increasingly vocal concerns and in response to the numerous recent
mass shootings, these national membership organizations have begun to take a more
outspoken lead in advocatingfor firearm safety. Organizations such as the American
Medical Association,[6] the American
College of Emergency Physicians,[7] and
the American College of Surgeons Committee on Trauma[8] have released new position statements and/or editorials
advocating for increased research funding and the introduction of sensible regulatory
and enforcement policies at the state and national levels that have demonstrated
evidence at curbing firearm violence. The National Academy of Medicine also recently
held a conference exploring ways in which health care systems can address the issue of
firearm violence at both the individual practitioner and the medical system
levels.[9] Recent events,
including the National Institutes of Health-funded research initiatives (eg, Firearm
Safety Among Children and Teens Consortium) to build research capacity in this arena, as
well as the American Foundation for Firearm Injury Reduction in Medicine (AFFIRM), a
coalition of clinicians and researchers across medical specialties committed to reducing
firearm violence, are indicators of the beginning of the end of the medical
community’s silence on the issue of firearm research and safety.Although such attention is urgently needed, the article by Schuur et al[5] highlights the disconnect that currently
exists between physician organization political action committee (PAC) priorities and
the positions of their membership when it comes to firearm injury prevention. The
authors found that even among professional organizations that endorsed the 2015
Firearm-Related Injury and Death in the United States: A Call to Action, there was
significant support for candidates with records in opposition to firearm safety
policies. As the authors note, this is not a new issue in medicine. For many years, we
saw a similar discrepancy between the American Medical Association’s public calls
to regulate the tobacco industry and their financial support of politicians who actively
voted against such regulations.[10] This
history lesson serves as an important cautionary tale. Schuur et al[5] provide transparency in how medical PACs are
aligned with this public health issue. Although it is, to our knowledge, a first
in-depth assessment of this alignment and lack thereof, it is unlikely to be the last
such examination in relation to firearm injury prevention goals of PACs and voices in
the physician community. As greater transparency is brought to this issue by analyses
such as in the article by Schuur et al,[5] medical PACs must consider the increasing physician voice on the
need to address firearm-associated morbidity and mortality in the policy arena to reduce
their experience with this issue in emergency bays, operating rooms, and clinics.