Gun violence is a major cause of preventable injury and death in the United States, leading to more than 33,000 deaths each year. However, gun violence prevention is an understudied and underfunded area of research. We review the barriers to research in the field, including restrictions on federal funding. We then outline potential areas in which further research could inform clinical practice, public health efforts, and public policy. We also review examples of innovative collaborations among interdisciplinary teams working to develop strategies to integrate gun violence prevention into patient-doctor interactions in order to interrupt the cycle of gun violence.
An Ethical Obligation to Address Gun ViolenceMore than twenty survivors of the Pulse nightclub massacre traveled together to Boston, Massachusetts, in the days before the one-year anniversary of that horrific night. They met with a group of physicians, nurses, social workers, administrators, and others at our hospital to talk about their experience. They recounted their memories of the sounds of gunfire, the screams of those around them, and the moans from those felled beside them. They described the ups and downs that have characterized their attempts to rebuild in the year since gunfire shattered their sense of normalcy. They shared their stories in the hopes that if more people could understand what it means to be affected by gun violence, then we, as a nation, would be compelled to act.Gun violence is an enduring public health crisis in the United States, and, by now, many of the statistics are well known: firearm-related violence results in more than 33,000 deaths each year, or an average of 93 deaths every day. Nearly two-thirds of those deaths are the result of suicide [1]. Firearm-related violence is the third leading cause of death for children in America [2] and the twelfth leading cause of death for Americans of all ages [3]. While devastating, these statistics still underestimate the human toll of this violence because for the tens of thousands of people who are killed every year as a result of gun-related injuries, more than twice as many suffer nonfatal gunshot wounds [1]. These injuries can result in long-term physical disabilities, are a leading cause of spinal cord injuries in the United States, and can lead to mental health problems, including