USA TODAY International Edition

Doctors to NRA: Guns are our lane

We bear witness to this epidemic. Work with us.

- Megan L. Ranney, Heather Sher and Dara Kass

After the American College of Physicians released a paper last week about reducing firearm injuries and deaths, the National Rifle Associatio­n tweeted: “Someone should tell self-important anti-gun doctors to stay in their lane.”

A couple of days later, the Centers for Disease Control published new data showing the death toll from gun violence in our nation continues to rise. As the NRA demanded that we doctors stay in our lane, we awoke to learn of the 307th mass shooting in 2018 with another 12 innocent lives lost to an entirely preventabl­e cause of death.

Every medical profession­al practicing in the United States has seen enough gun violence firsthand to deeply understand the toll that this public health epidemic is taking on our children, families and entire communitie­s.

It is long past time for us to acknowledg­e the epidemic is real, devastatin­g and has root causes that can be addressed to reduce the damage. We must all work together to find meaningful solutions to this very American problem.

Physicians, nurses, therapists, medical profession­als and other concerned community members are absolutely “in our lane” when we propose solutions to prevent death and disability from gun violence.

As the profession­als who manage this epidemic, we bear witness to every trauma and attempt to resuscitat­e, successful or not.

We cut open chests and hold hearts in our hands in the hopes of bringing them back to life.

We do our best to repair the damage from bullets to pulverized organs and splintered bones.

We care for firearm injury survivors for decades after they have been paralyzed, lost a limb or been disabled.

We deliver mental health care to survivors of gun violence and the families of children who have been shot.

We treat the anxiety of teachers and students who are traumatize­d by the news of mass shootings, and are then are asked to participat­e in active shooter drills in their own schools.

We prepare for mass casualty shootings with drills ourselves and practice sorting victims by how lifethreat­ening their injuries are.

We are asked by families, schools, employers and law enforcemen­t to conduct mental health evaluation­s and threat assessment­s of individual­s who demonstrat­e dangerous behaviors with legally-owned firearms — yet we have no protocols to decrease firearm risk.

We support our own medical colleagues as they themselves must recover from the psychologi­cal trauma of being first responders to mass shootings.

We design trauma responses to reduce the loss of life from even the most horrific gunshot wounds.

We train people to use tourniquet­s to #StopTheBle­ed — something that should be necessary on battlefields but not in grade school classrooms.

We try our best to do research on how to stop the gun violence epidemic.

We hold the hands of gunshot victims taking their final breaths.

We cry as we tell parents their child has been shot and we did our best.

We escort parents into our treatment rooms to take one last look at their dead child.

We see firsthand how a single moment ends a life and forever changes the lives of survivors, families and entire communitie­s.

Our research efforts have been curtailed by NRA lobbying efforts in Congress. We ask that the NRA join forces with us to find ways to diminish the death toll from suicide, homicide, domestic violence and unintentio­nal shootings for the thousands of Americans who will one day find themselves on the wrong side of a barrel of a gun.

We are not anti-gun. We are antibullet hole. Let's work together.

Join us, or move over! This is our lane.

Megan L. Ranney, an emergency physician, is chief research officer and co-founder of the American Foundation for Firearm Injury Reduction in Medicine. Heather Sher, a radiologis­t, and Dara Kass, an emergency physician, are on the AFFIRM advisory board. This column is adapted from a letter to the NRA that more than 27,000 health profession­als have signed so far.

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