Houston Chronicle

Memorial Hermann vows action on guns

- By David L. Callender and James J. McCarthy David L. Callender, M.D. is the president and CEO of Memorial Hermann Health System. James J. McCarthy, M.D. is the executive vice president and chief physician executive of Memorial Hermann Health System, and a

One hundred and forty. That’s how many children 18 and under have been treated for gunshot wounds at Children’s Memorial Hermann Hospital in the last 12 months — a nearly 75 percent increase from just three years ago. With so many unspeakabl­e tragedies taking place across our country in recent weeks, we can all agree that Americans shouldn’t have to worry about being shot at their grocery store, church, school, doctor’s office or anywhere else. We mourn the loss of life, pray and promise “never again,” but we get stuck on the how.

You’ve heard it said already, but it bears repeating: Gun violence is not a political issue. It’s a national public health emergency. And it’s time we started treating it like one.

A recent New England Journal of Medicine article identified that since 2017, firearmrel­ated injuries have become the leading cause of death among children and adolescent­s in the United States. The trend holds true at Memorial Hermann — home to one of the busiest Level I trauma centers in the country and one of only two Level I pediatric trauma centers in the city — where gunshot wounds are now the leading cause of death in those under the age of 20. In Texas, the inflection point is 15 years. This means, in Texas, 15-year-olds are more likely to die from being shot than from any other cause.

At Memorial Hermann, we are deeply invested in our mission to improve the health of Greater Houston. To accomplish this, we must be willing to confront this unchecked epidemic that is currently plaguing our future generation­s. Gun violence is a complex issue that will require a multiprong­ed approach with multiple partners collaborat­ing to address it. As the region’s largest health system, we commit to being part of the solution and have identified two areas we can start tackling immediatel­y.

For one, we will further expand access to mental health care. Today, Memorial Hermann offers these resources to Greater Houston through free-standing mental health crisis clinics and our health centers for schools, but we know we can do more.

That’s why we’re pledging to further increase access to mental health care in the communitie­s we serve, with a special focus on children. By seeking out innovative new partnershi­ps over the next several months, we will help bring additional mental health resources to our young people through their schools — care that can be accessed virtually, as needed, at their convenienc­e, and at no cost to them. In addition, we will be opening another school-based health center in Humble ISD later this year, and we are strengthen­ing the mental health programs at our existing centers by adding additional licensed clinical social worker positions.

Secondly, we know we must do more from a public safety perspectiv­e to reduce the risk of injury as it relates to firearms. Gun safety is everyone’s responsibi­lity. Too often, children encounter guns because their family members are not storing them safely in the house, making deadly weapons easily accessible to small hands. Safe storage is key.

In a Chronicle op-ed published just after the 2018 Santa Fe High School shooting, we called on the country to listen to the medical profession­als’ case for change: to address the growing threat that gun violence was posing to public health.

Four years later, we are now taking more specific action. Dr. Sandra McKay, an associate professor of pediatrics with McGovern Medical School at UTHealth Houston and Children’s Memorial Hermann Hospital, is one of the experts leading gun violence research in the Houston area. She recently told the Chronicle that one of the things health care providers could be doing to help is handing out free gun locks to the community.

We agree, which is why Memorial Hermann will be distributi­ng firearm safety kits to individual­s and families across Greater Houston. Each kit will include a gun-locking device and instructio­ns for safe gun handling and responsibl­e storage. Within the next several months, our goal is to make thousands of these kits convenient to pick up at locations across the city and available free of charge, no questions asked.

We invite others to join us in these efforts, and we applaud those who are already taking similar steps to do what they can to help. By taking action today, we will give our community — and specifical­ly our children — a safer, and healthier, tomorrow.

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