American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons
Position Statement
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Firearms Violence
The American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons believes that
death, injury and disability resulting from firearm violence must
be reduced.
Firearms violence is a significant public health problem. The
Academy believes that the public should recognize the following
information which outlines an epidemic of injury and death due
to firearms.
- Firearms are involved in the deaths of more than 37,000 people
each year, the second leading cause of injury-related death in
the United States.
- Firearm deaths have increased 60 percent since 1968. During
1991, 5,356 young men and women under the age of 20 were killed
by firearms, the leading cause of death for both African-American
and Caucasian youth in America.
- Accidental shootings account for 5 percent of all firearm
deaths in the United States each year. Youths in the home, under
the age of 20, are involved in 84 percent of these cases. Firearm
deaths involving children and adolescents have increased 143 percent
between 1986 and 1992.
- The most common reason given for purchase of a gun is protection
from crime, yet one study shows only two out of 398 firearm deaths
in a home involved an intruder. Relatives and friends are 43 times
more likely to die from a gun kept in the home for protection
than is an intruder. Self-defense handgun shootings account for
only 1.2 percent of homicides, according to the FBI.
- Medical costs for firearm violence surpass $4 billion yearly
and total economic losses are estimated to exceed $14.5 billion
each year. In 1993, the average estimated hospital cost of each
firearm injury was more than $19,000.
The American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons believes that
most deaths and injuries due to firearms are preventable. The
Academy is committed to reducing death, injury and disability
due to firearm violence through support of a comprehensive public
health approach which includes the following:
Education, Prevention and Intervention
- Education of health professionals for the prevention, acute
care and rehabilitation of firearm injuries.
- Public education programs designed to teach and encourage
proper firearm use, lock and key storage and firearm safety.
- Supporting programs that educate patients and families about
the dangers of firearms to children.
- Encouraging physicians to ask their patients about the presence
of firearms in the home and encouraging proper storage to achieve
a "childproof home."
- Scientific research, including social studies, aimed at identifying
causes and solutions to the firearm problem.
Data Collection and Trend Monitoring
- Accurate and objective data collection and trend monitoring
of firearm injuries to enable the development of sound public
policy.
- Public funding for a national firearm injury and fatality
reporting system of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Public Policy Strategies
- Safety intervention strategies to control firearm possession
and use by unsupervised youth under age 18.
- Implementation of proper licensing fees.
- Enactment of a required national waiting period that allows
for an expanded police background check.
- Banning the sale or manufacture of firearms that are not detectable
by ordinary security devices.
- Creating a long-term goal to eliminate specific categories
of firearms that have little or no legitimate utility.
- Stricter enforcement of present local, state and federal laws
and the imposition of mandatory penalties for crimes committed
with firearms.
- Prohibiting the presence of firearms in hospitals except for
law enforcement officials.
- Encouraging the American Hospital Association and the Joint
Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations to develop
guidelines and standards regarding hospital security issues.
© May 1996 American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons
This material may not be modified without the express written
permission of the American Academy of Orthopaedic Surgeons.
Document Number: 1134
For additional information, contact Alvin Nagelberg at (847) 384-4138
or email nagelberg@mac.aaos.org