A blueprint for reducing gun violence by 2040, according to experts
A blueprint for reducing gun violence by 2040, according to experts
Shootings have killed more than 800,000 people and injured over 2 million others in the United States since the start of this century. In March, dozens of violence prevention leaders convened in Chicago at the JAMA Summit on Reducing Firearm Violence and Harms to discuss steps to reduce gun violence, according to a in the Journal of the American Medical Association.
The report, published on Nov. 3, shows that the 60 leaders who attended the summit represented multiple disciplines. They included emergency physicians, public health scholars, psychiatrists, historians, and social workers. The summit was the first of its kind presented by the medical journal. Its purpose: to develop a roadmap for substantially curtailing the number of shooting deaths and injuries over the next 15 years.
鈥淲e鈥檝e gained a lot of knowledge and can point to a variety of things that seem to reduce gun violence, but still, there鈥檚 a lot we don鈥檛 know, and there鈥檚 still a lot of challenges,鈥 Daniel Webster, a public health scholar at Johns Hopkins University who has studied gun violence for over 30 years, told .
Gun violence as a major public health issue has received more attention and Surgeon General issued his office鈥檚 about gun violence鈥檚 far-reaching effects, prevention efforts.
But since President Donald Trump returned to the White House, his administration has rolled back much of that progress. Layoffs at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention have responsible for studying and helping to prevent shootings, and federal funding for research and has dwindled.
During the summit, leaders called for a 鈥渞esearch revolution鈥 on preventing gun-related harms as one of the five steps needed to improve public safety by 2040, according to the report. The other steps emphasized strengthening communities, reframing gun injury as a preventable issue, taking a whole-of-government and society approach to addressing violence, and harnessing regulatory and technological opportunities responsibly.
Dr. Stephen Hargarten, an emergency physician and professor at the Medical College of Wisconsin, has spent his career studying how regulatory and technological innovation can help reduce firearm deaths. He spoke about the , a new metric to measure the deadliness of different guns and bullets, something that could help policymakers better decide how to respond to varying levels of harm.
鈥淲e wanted to look at how technologies and innovation affect things like suicide rates, homicides, and firearm thefts,鈥 and whether something like a could play a role in reducing gun-related harms, Hargarten told The Trace. He also explained to the other leaders how Congress could empower federal regulators to require certain safety features in firearms. 鈥淎s it stands, they , and we feel that that鈥檚 something for us to be looking at.鈥
The report on the summit lays out several approaches that research has shown reduce firearm deaths, many of which The Trace has covered over the past 10 years. They included , programs, , , , and .
The report also noted that, even though homicide rates have declined over the past two years, more people believe that crime is increasing. More effective research and communication are needed to combat these misconceptions, the report argues. It is a dark and challenging time for Americans 鈥渨ho care about public health and reducing gun violence,鈥 Nick Wilson, a summit participant and the senior director for gun violence prevention at the Center for American Progress, said in an email.
鈥淭he summit reaffirmed my optimism that we will get through this and rebuild our institutions stronger than ever,鈥 Wilson said. 鈥淚t will help build support for future federal action by demonstrating what works.鈥
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