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This article discusses the importance of a public health approach to firearm violence prevention, highlighting the role of the World Health Organization and the need for global action. It covers various approaches to ending firearm violence, including legal, correctional, educational, economic, human rights, international treaties, and public health strategies.
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The Public Health Approach to Firearm ViolenceWhat is it, Why Do We Need It? Victor W. Sidel, MD Distinguished University Professor of Social Medicine Montefiore Medical Center & Albert Einstein College of Medicine Past President: American Public Health Association, Physician for Social Responsibility, International Physicians for the Prevention of Nuclear War IANSA Public Health Network Panel on “Risk and Resilience: Understanding the Factors that Influence Small Arms Violence” United Nations Church Centre -- July 16, 2008
UN Program of Action on SALW The United Nations Program of Action to Prevent, Combat and Eradicate the Illicit Trade in Small Arms and Light weapons in all Aspects was initiated in 2001. It covers many of the approaches to preventing firearms violence but, despite the efforts of the World Health Organization, fails to recognize the role of the public health community in helping to solve the problem.
Approaches to Ending Firearm Violence • Legal and Regulatory • Correctional • Educational • Economic • Human Rights • International Treaties • Public Health
Public Health Approach to Firearm Violence • In 1996, the World Health Assembly identifies violence as a leading public health problem. • In 2001, the World Health Organization (WHO) prepares a document, Small Arms and Global Health, for the first UN Conference on Small Arms and Light Weapons. • In its document, WHO states “Violence is . . . an important health problem – and one that is largely preventable. Public health approaches have much to contribute to solving it.”
Public Health Approach to Firearm Violence • In 2003, the World Health Organization publishes its World Report on Violence and Health in Arabic, Chinese, English, French, Italian, Russian and Spanish. • The WHO Report classifies violence into three categories: Interpersonal Violence, Self-Directed Violence, and Collective Violence. • Firearms play an important role in all these forms of violence and WHO advocates an integrated public health approach to prevention of all of them.
Public Health Approach to Violence Prevention • Define the Problem • Identify Risk and Protection Factors • Develop and Test Prevention Strategies • Implement Prevention Strategies • Monitor the Effectiveness of Strategies
Public Health Approach to Violence Prevention The Epidemiologic Model • Victim: Location and role • Agent: Types of firearms • Environment: Vulnerable factors; protective factors; culture Involvement of health workers
The Global Gun Epidemic The Epi Model: Victim • Of the 300,000 annual gun-related deaths approximately 80, 000- 100,000 are direct conflict deaths • Over 200, 000 in non-conflict contexts • Disproportionate number of gun deaths occur in the Americas
The Global Gun Epidemic The Epi Mode: Agent • Regardless of context, guns increase lethality • Reducing inappropriate access to guns reduces the risk of injury and death • Unregulated access to firearms fuels a culture of violence
The Global Gun Epidemic The Epi Mode: Environment • Collective violence • Interpersonal violence • Self-directed violence • Culture of violence
The Global Gun Epidemic • Multi-layered strategy (1) • Availability of current and reliable data • Consideration of the entire gun supply chain, both legal and illicit • Reduction of the culture of violence • Post conflict demobilization, disarmament and reintegration
The Global Gun Epidemic • Multi-layered strategy (2) • International coordination and action • Domestic violence and firearms legislation • Implementation issues involving law enforcement and courts • Political participation
The Need for Global Action • Coming together of different cultural, language and national traditions • Coming together of different advocacy movements