Chattanooga Times Free Press

FIGHT GUN VIOLENCE ONE STEP AT A TIME

- Michelle Au, an anesthesio­logist in metro Atlanta, is a Democratic state senator in Georgia.

While COVID-19 has dominated our public health discussion­s over the last year, we have failed to adequately address another deadly epidemic.

This epidemic affects more than 300 people every day in the United States and has a fatality rate of about 30%. It claims the lives of more than 3,000 American children and teens per year.

This uniquely American epidemic is one of gun violence.

And just like any public health crisis, there is no one easy fix. Consider cancer. Though we sometimes refer to this constellat­ion of diseases as a monolith, there are, of course, many different forms of cancer, each with its own presentati­on, at-risk patient population­s and modes of prevention.

And while there is no single interventi­on that will uniformly cut down on all morbidity and mortality due to cancer, we have neverthele­ss spent the last century and then some working on ways to screen for, treat and reduce the risk of getting cancer, in all its forms.

Similarly, there are many forms of gun violence. And while mass shootings tend to garner the most attention, such incidents actually account for a small portion of firearm deaths in the United States. More common are gun deaths and injury due to suicide, intentiona­l homicide, domestic violence, robbery and assault, and accidental death.

And just like cancer, different forms of gun violence predominat­e in different at-risk population­s, present in different ways and require unique modes of prevention. In other words, the same measures that prevent gun violence in the form of suicide are not necessaril­y the same measures preventing gun violence in the form of police brutality. They are different diseases under the same diagnostic umbrella.

No one measure, legislativ­e or otherwise, will mitigate all modes of gun violence, any more than an annual colonoscop­y will prevent all deaths due to cancer. Those who argue that a particular strategy is not a panacea and — therefore not worthwhile — are missing the point.

For instance, no one would suggest that seat belts eliminate all motor vehicle fatalities. However, seat belts — in conjunctio­n with airbags, DUI laws, improved traffic signals, windshield safety glass and child car seats — are measures that, together, have contribute­d to a five-fold decrease in traffic fatalities since Congress passed the National Traffic and Motor Vehicle Safety Act in 1966.

We know how to do this. We’ve done it before.

And now, we can do it again. This month, President Joe Biden presented a series of modest measures to curtail the gun violence epidemic plaguing our country. The executive actions include increasing funding for community violence interventi­on programs, directing the Department of Justice to stop the unregulate­d sales of “ghost gun” kits that can be made from parts purchased online, and encouragin­g states to adopt “red flag” laws that permit family members or law enforcemen­t to petition a state court to temporaril­y remove firearms from someone who may be a danger to themselves or others.

The president has acknowledg­ed these incrementa­l solutions are not nearly enough. Larger-scale measures would require the support of Congress.

Gun violence is a complicate­d and intractabl­e epidemic. But we once considered cancer untreatabl­e as well, and most early attempts to treat it were small, palliative and only marginally effective against what felt like an incurable problem. The key is that scientists and doctors didn’t stop there.

Sometimes the boldest move, especially when fighting an epidemic seemingly without end, is simply understand­ing that effective interventi­ons involve taking one small step at a time.

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Michelle Au

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