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Supreme Court Ruling Suggests Data can Prevent Gun Deaths

July 3, 2016 by drjaffer

With the recent 6-2 ruling upholding the federal law banning people with misdemeanor domestic violence convictions from owning guns, the Supreme Court has sent a clear message regarding gun violence: when we have good data about how to prevent gun deaths, the federal government has a constitutional right to act.

For decades we’ve known there was a strong link between domestic violence and gun homicides, and in 1996 an amendment was passed barring people convicted of domestic violence misdemeanors from owning handguns. Research shows that abused women are five times more likely to be killed by a domestic violence partner if that person owns a firearm, and that two-thirds of women who had been domestically abused in homes with a firearm had been threatened at some point with that firearm. It’s also been shown that laws that prevent domestic abusers from owning guns are associated with reduced rates of domestic gun homicides.

The recent Supreme Court ruling gives hope to groups that are pushing for better funding for research into gun violence statistics – especially in light of recent events such as the Orlando nightclub shooting, with opposing factions arguing about whether or not restricting gun ownership rights to certain individuals could prevent mass shooting. It sends a clear message that, given strong data on how to save lives, the government has the authority to pass laws that restrict gun ownership for select groups of high-risk citizens.

The problem, of course, is that we still only have limited data on who commits gun crimes and why. The CDC is still hampered by restrictions on research funding, and doctors are still restricted from collecting data on gun ownership and risk. But at least for now we have assurance from the courts that what limited information we do have can be used for the greater good.

Filed Under: Featured, Gun Violence Tagged With: domestic abuse, domestic violence, gun research, gun violence, obamacare, supreme court, voisine

Why We Don’t Fund Gun Violence Research

May 19, 2016 by drjaffer

Original Title: 19 front 27b_5x
CDC Headquarters in Atlanta

Whether or not guns themselves are a problem in our society may be a matter opinion, but one thing that we should all agree on is that we should have good data on how and why gun violence is committed (as well as the who, what, where, and when).  Both private citizens and law enforcement deserve to know when they might be at risk and what they can do to protect themselves, while doctors would better understand how to identify high-risk patients with mental health issues that might predispose them to violence. This should make sense regardless of political affiliation or how you feel about gun ownership.

And yet we have very little data. In fact, we perform almost no research at all on gun violence in our country. And the reason is entirely political – provisions in the annual appropriations bill (which directs federal funds toward research) prevents any money from being spent on gun control… and for decades, the NRA has been successful at branding “gun violence prevention research” as a sub-category of “gun control”.

It was 1996 when we passed legislation intended to strip the CDC of the ability to fund gun control research. The law was taken a step further, however, and the CDC essentially stopped performing any gun violence research at all. Since then, this ruling has also been applied to the National Institute of Health (NIC). As a result, for the past 20 years the United States has collected virtually no data on gun violence that could be used to curb or head off future incidences before they happen. And the result is that we have only limited private studies to look at when trying to figure out what to do about gun violence outbreaks, leaving our law officers and doctors mostly powerless. Even the senator who wrote the bill expresses deep regret at the results of his actions, stating that the law has been over-interpreted and resulted in unnecessary loss of life.

On top of all this, the NRA has fought in recent years to restrict doctors from asking their patients questions related to gun violence prevention. While they have been unsuccessful in preventing doctors from doing their jobs, they still have managed to force language into the Affordable Care Act and other provisions preventing the collection of data. They have managed to keep medical professionals from treating gun violence deaths as a “preventable disease”, despite similar causes of death being treated as such.

While there have been efforts to reverse these restrictive laws and open up the field of research for the public good, so far these attempts have amounted to nothing. The NRA and legislative allies have decided that public knowledge is a threat to the 2nd amendment, despite the fact that most Americans support gun ownership. The most recent attempt to end the ban on gun violence research is likely to go nowhere, at least until public opinion changes on the matter enough to pressure congress into taking action.

For now, we’re firing in the dark.

Filed Under: Featured, Gun Violence Tagged With: affordable care act, appropriations act, cdc, gun control, gun research, gun violence, murder, NRA, obamacare

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About Dr. Jaffer

Salim A. Jaffer, MD, MS, practices clinical gastroenterology in Lansing, Michigan. He received his Doctor of Medicine degree from the University of Toledo in Ohio.

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