Albany Times Union

Gun violence is a solvable public health crisis

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As the murdered children of Uvalde are laid to rest, our nation needs to muster the courage and political will to treat rising gun violence and mass shootings as an acute public health crisis.

When auto accidents claimed a large number of lives, government and industry dollars funded research to make cars safer, leading to seat belts, airbags and other now standard safety features. Public health studies that linked smoking to cancer, lung disease and other health risks changed smoking habits. Subsequent legal action held tobacco companies responsibl­e for having hidden the health risks associated with their products.

The Second Amendment protects gun ownership. The U.S. Supreme Court upheld the individual right to own guns in the Heller decision. In that same ruling, Justice Antonin Scalia also noted that “like most rights, the right secured by the Second Amendment is not unlimited” and that “the right was not a right to keep and carry any weapon whatsoever in any manner whatsoever and for whatever purpose.”

Federal dollars are slowly returning to gun violence research after more than two decades. But gun violence research is funded at $63 per life lost, making it the second-mostneglec­ted major cause of death, according to a 2017 estimate in the Journal of the American Medical Associatio­n.

A research letter in the New England Journal of Medicine concluded that firearm-related deaths increased 13 percent between 2019 and 2020, with a stunning 30 percent — occurring among those younger than 19. Roughly 65 percent of gun deaths among adults were suicides and 30 percent were homicides. However, among teens and younger Americans, those percentage­s are roughly flipped.

The nation needs to increase mental health investment­s and pass sensible gun safety regulation­s at the federal and state levels. Public support exists for background checks, age limits on weapons purchases, red flag laws and mandatory training for firearm owners. Most of all, the nation has to break the cycle of violence, and a more rigorous examinatio­n of gun deaths and injuries as a public health crisis will allow researcher­s to better determine how to prevent such deaths.

Families and communitie­s wracked by gun violence are forever broken, and the rest of us share their grief and fear that a gunman could mete out carnage on our families and friends. As a society, we must not allow this carnage to persist.

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