B005 Gun Violence as a Public Health Issue
In 2016, a coalition of more than 100 medical groups sent a letter to Congressional leaders saying: “In 1996, Congress passed the so-called Dickey amendment as a rider to the Labor-Health and Human Services-Education Appropriations bill. The language stated that the CDC could not fund research that would “advocate or promote gun control,” and the language has remained in each subsequent annual funding bill. At the same time, Congress cut CDC funding for this research. Although the Dickey amendment does not explicitly prevent research on gun violence, the combination of these two actions has caused a dramatic chilling effect on federal research that has stalled and stymied progress on gathering critical data to inform prevention of gun violence for the past 20 years. Furthermore, it has discouraged the next generation of researchers from entering the field. Gun violence is a serious public health epidemic resulting in the senseless deaths of an average of 91 Americans, and another 108 gun injuries, each and every day. A central part of preventing future tragedies is through conducting rigorous scientific research as this has been a proven successful approach in reducing deaths due to other injuries.” In particular, doctors and public health experts emphasize that studying gun violence as a public health problem could help identify strategies for preventing gun-related suicides and accidents in which children fire guns. In 2015, former Rep. Jay Dickey, who originally proposed the amendment bearing his name, wrote to the House Gun Violence Prevention Task Force urging repeal of the amendment that bears his name. “Research could have been continued on gun violence without infringing on the rights of gun owners, in the same fashion that the highway industry continued its research without eliminating the automobile,” he wrote. “Doing nothing is no longer an acceptable solution.”
Explanation
In 2016, a coalition of more than 100 medical groups sent a letter to Congressional leaders saying: “In 1996, Congress passed the so-called Dickey amendment as a rider to the Labor-Health and Human Services-Education Appropriations bill. The language stated that the CDC could not fund research that would “advocate or promote gun control,” and the language has remained in each subsequent annual funding bill. At the same time, Congress cut CDC funding for this research. Although the Dickey amendment does not explicitly prevent research on gun violence, the combination of these two actions has caused a dramatic chilling effect on federal research that has stalled and stymied progress on gathering critical data to inform prevention of gun violence for the past 20 years. Furthermore, it has discouraged the next generation of researchers from entering the field. Gun violence is a serious public health epidemic resulting in the senseless deaths of an average of 91 Americans, and another 108 gun injuries, each and every day. A central part of preventing future tragedies is through conducting rigorous scientific research as this has been a proven successful approach in reducing deaths due to other injuries.” In particular, doctors and public health experts emphasize that studying gun violence as a public health problem could help identify strategies for preventing gun-related suicides and accidents in which children fire guns. In 2015, former Rep. Jay Dickey, who originally proposed the amendment bearing his name, wrote to the House Gun Violence Prevention Task Force urging repeal of the amendment that bears his name. “Research could have been continued on gun violence without infringing on the rights of gun owners, in the same fashion that the highway industry continued its research without eliminating the automobile,” he wrote. “Doing nothing is no longer an acceptable solution.”