Pediatric Trauma Department, John R. Oishei Children's Hospital, Buffalo, NY, United States; Department of Surgery, Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, University at Buffalo, 1001 Main Street, 5th Floor, Buffalo, NY 14203, United States; Department of Epidemiology and Environmental Health, School of Public Health and Health Professions, University at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY, United States.
Jacobs School of Medicine and Biomedical Sciences, University at Buffalo, Buffalo, NY, United States.
J Pediatr Surg. 2022 Jan;57(1):130-134. doi: 10.1016/j.jpedsurg.2021.09.011. Epub 2021 Sep 20.
We examine the content of physician professional association statements and assess the extent to which these statements kept gun violence-especially against children-on policymakers' agendas.
After constructing a list of U.S. physician professional associations, we located position statements by consulting association websites, conducting a PubMed search, and reviewing the citations of identified statements. Once unique statements were identified (N = 32), two reviewers independently coded content such as major events, pediatric focus, firearm type, and policy recommendations.
Recent statements appear to be timed following mass casualty events such as the Sandy Hook and Parkland school shootings. Associations have increasingly adopted public health framing over time. Nine statements focused on the pediatric population, while an additional 13 made reference to the pediatric population. The most common recommendations include increased gun violence research or research funding (84%), freedom of physician counseling (75%), mandatory background checks (72%), and safe storage (72%).
Based on this analysis, recent statement volume appears to be tied to current events rather than keeping daily gun violence against children continuously on the agenda. Mentions of "gun control" have receded over time and have been replaced by public health framing that places advocacy for firearm injury prevention in the physician's domain.
III/IV.
我们研究了医师专业协会声明的内容,并评估了这些声明在多大程度上将枪支暴力问题,尤其是针对儿童的枪支暴力问题,提上了政策制定者的议程。
在构建了一份美国医师专业协会的名单后,我们通过查阅协会网站、进行 PubMed 搜索以及审查已确定声明的参考文献,找到了立场声明。一旦确定了独特的声明(N=32),两位评审员就会独立对主要事件、儿科重点、枪支类型和政策建议等内容进行编码。
最近的声明似乎是在桑迪胡克和帕克兰学校枪击等大规模伤亡事件之后发布的。随着时间的推移,协会越来越多地采用公共卫生框架。有 9 份声明关注儿科人群,而另外 13 份声明则提到了儿科人群。最常见的建议包括增加枪支暴力研究或研究资金(84%)、医生咨询的自由(75%)、强制性背景调查(72%)和安全储存(72%)。
根据这项分析,最近声明的数量似乎与当前事件有关,而不是让针对儿童的日常枪支暴力问题持续列入议程。“枪支管制”的提及随着时间的推移而减少,取而代之的是将倡导预防枪支伤害纳入医生的职责范围的公共卫生框架。
III/IV。