PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

CU researcher calls for improved firearm safety counseling by physicians

2015-08-04
(Press-News.org) AURORA, Colo. (Aug. 4, 2015) - Physicians should improve the way they discuss firearm safety with patients by showing more respect for the viewpoints of gun owners, according to an article by a University of Colorado School of Medicine faculty member published in the Aug. 4 issue of JAMA.

Marian "Emmy" Betz, MD, MPH, associate professor of emergency medicine, and Garen J. Wintemute, MD, MPH, professor of emergency medicine at the University of California Davis, write that physician counseling about gun safety is a key component of preventing firearm injury and death. Recent legislative efforts to restrict such conversations are concerning and controversial, and national medical organizations support physician discussions about firearm safety. But Betz and Wintemute contend that physicians should also reconsider how they discuss such issues with patients.

"It is time to address cultural competence related to firearm safety counseling," Betz and Wintemute write. "This includes recognizing that there are actually multiple subpopulations of gun owners whose perspectives and preferences may vary based on their reasons for owning firearms."

Respectful counseling behaviors and providing nonjudgmental firearm safety information can improve the quality of interaction between physicians and patients. While physicians may be uncomfortable talking about firearms, they should recognize there are many reasons patients may own guns.

"The solution is not for every physician to purchase a firearm or become a gun expert," they write. "Rather, physicians who own guns should be asked to provide leadership developing cultural competence in firearm safety counseling, rather than being marginalized or silenced within the physician culture."

They note than an estimated 13 percent to 41 percent of physicians themselves own guns.

In addition to improved counseling, public health interventions, such as a model collaborative suicide-prevention project adopted by health professionals, firearm rights advocates and firearm dealers in New Hampshire, can help. That project, which is now being replicated in Colorado and other states, uses social marketing approaches to encourage friends, families and gun dealers to recognize warning signs for suicide and to help individuals in crisis safely store their guns.

"Physicians are entitled to their own perspectives and political opinions, but to serve patients and protect them from disease and injury, it is important to counsel them in ways that are respectful, meaningful, and effective," they write. "At times, clinicians may feel uncomfortable or uninformed when discussing certain subjects, and may disagree with a patient's choices or beliefs. However, this discomfort or disagreement cannot justify either offensive condescension or silent inaction."

INFORMATION:

About the University of Colorado School of Medicine

Faculty at the University of Colorado School of Medicine work to advance science and improve care. These faculty members include physicians, educators and scientists at University of Colorado Health, Children's Hospital Colorado, Denver Health, National Jewish Health, and the Denver Veterans Affairs Medical Center. The school is located on the Anschutz Medical Campus, one of four campuses in the University of Colorado system. To learn more about the medical school's care, education, research and community engagement, visit its web site. Contact: Mark Couch, 303-724-5377, mark.couch@ucdenver.edu



ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Mindfulness-based stress reduction therapy decreases PTSD symptom severity among veterans

2015-08-04
In a randomized trial that included veterans with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), those who received mindfulness-based stress reduction therapy showed greater improvement in self-reported PTSD symptom severity, although the average improvement appears to have been modest, according to a study in the August 4 issue of JAMA, a violence/human rights theme issue. Posttraumatic stress disorder affects 23 percent of veterans returning from Afghanistan and Iraq. Left untreated, PTSD is associated with high rates of other disorders, disability, and poor quality of life. ...

Progress has been made in reducing rates of violence in US; overall numbers remain high

2015-08-04
Even though homicide and assault rates have decreased in the U.S. in recent years, the number of these and other types of violent acts remains high, according to a report in the August 4 issue of JAMA, a violence/human rights theme issue. The authors write that multiple strategies exist to improve interpersonal violence prevention efforts, and health care providers are an important part of this solution. Interpersonal violence is a pervasive public health, social, and developmental threat that affects millions of U.S. residents each year. It is a leading cause of death ...

Emergency department intervention does not reduce heavy drinking or partner violence

2015-08-04
A brief motivational intervention delivered during an emergency department visit did not improve outcomes for women with heavy drinking involved in abusive relationships, according to a study in the August 4 issue of JAMA, a violence/human rights theme issue. There is a strong and reciprocal association between two highly prevalent public health problems: intimate partner violence (IPV) and heavy drinking. Each risk individually represents major costs to individuals, families, and society. The emergency department (ED) visit is conceptualized as a sensitive period or ...

Intervention to screen women for partner violence does not improve health outcomes

2015-08-04
Screening women for partner violence and providing a resource list did not influence the number of hospitalizations, emergency department, or outpatient care visits compared with women only receiving a resource list or receiving no intervention over 3 years, according to a study in the August 4 issue of JAMA, a violence/human rights theme issue. The U.S. Preventive Services Task Force recommends women of reproductive age be screened for partner violence. However, others, such as the World Health Organization conclude there is insufficient evidence for this recommendation. ...

One-fourth of female sex workers in northern Mexican cities enter sex trade as minors

2015-08-04
More than 1 in 4 female sex workers in the northern Mexico cities of Tijuana and Ciudad Juarez reported entering the sex trade as minors, and entering the sex trade as an adolescent vs as an adult was associated with a greater risk for HIV infection, according to a study in the August 4 issue of JAMA, a violence/human rights theme issue. Adolescents migrating from Central America and Mexico to the United States are at risk for being trafficked into the sex industry in Mexico's northern border cities. Research from other regions indicates that those entering the sex trade ...

High rates of violence, HIV infection for adolescents in sex trade on US-Mexico border

2015-08-04
Researchers at University of California, San Diego School of Medicine report that more than one in four female sex workers in two Mexican cities on the U.S. border entered the sex trade younger than age 18; one in eight before their 16th birthday. These women were more than three times more likely to become infected with HIV than those who started sex work as adults. They were also three times more likely to be violently coerced to engage in sex with male clients and seven times less likely to use a condom during their first month in the sex trade. The study is published ...

Scientists solve mystery behind earthworm digestion

Scientists solve mystery behind earthworm digestion
2015-08-04
Scientists have discovered how earthworms can digest plant material, such as fallen leaves, that would defeat most other herbivores. Earthworms are responsible for returning the carbon locked inside dead plant material back into the ground. They drag fallen leaves and other plant material down from the surface and eat them, enriching the soil, and they do this in spite of toxic chemicals produced by plants to deter herbivores. The scientists, led by Dr Jake Bundy and Dr Manuel Liebeke from Imperial College London, have identified molecules in the earthworm gut that ...

New device converts DC electric field to terahertz radiation

2015-08-04
WASHINGTON, D.C., August 4, 2015 -- Terahertz radiation, the no-man's land of the electromagnetic spectrum, has long stymied researchers. Optical technologies can finagle light in the shorter-wavelength visible and infrared range, while electromagnetic techniques can manipulate longer-wavelength radiation like microwaves and radio waves. Terahertz radiation, on the other hand, lies in the gap between microwaves and infrared, whether neither traditional way to manipulate waves works effectively. As a result, creating coherent artificial sources of terahertz radiation in ...

A droplet's pancake bounce

A droplets pancake bounce
2015-08-04
WASHINGTON, D.C., August 4, 2015 -- Studies of the impact a droplet makes on solid surfaces hark back more than a century. And until now, it was generally believed that a droplet's impact on a solid surface could always be separated into two phases: spreading and retracting. But it's much more complex than that, as a team of researchers from City University of Hong Kong, Ariel University in Israel, and Dalian University of Technology in China report in the journal Applied Physics Letters, from AIP Publishing. "During the spreading phase, the droplet undergoes an inertia-dominant ...

New weapon in the fight against malnutrition

New weapon in the fight against malnutrition
2015-08-04
UBC scientists have opened the doors to new research into malnutrition by creating an animal model that replicates the imbalance of gut bacteria associated with the difficult-to-treat disease. Malnutrition affects millions of people worldwide and is responsible for one-fifth of deaths in children under the age of five. Children can also experience impaired cognitive development and stunted growth. The problem arises when people don't have enough food to eat and their diet lacks proper nutrients. The disease also has a lot to do with environmental factors and it has ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Even light exercise could help slow cognitive decline in people at risk of Alzheimer’s

Prostate cancer discovery opens door to more tailored treatments

The potential oncogenic role of serum-derived hsa_circ_101555 as a non-invasive diagnostic/prognostic marker in patients with hepatocellular carcinoma

Use of traditional Chinese medicine in Chinese patients with cancer receiving outpatient care: primary reasons and communication with oncologists

Largest imaging spectro-polarimeter achieves first light at the NSF Daniel K. Inouye solar telescope

The heart of world’s largest solar telescope begins to beat

Society for cardiovascular angiography & interventions scientific sessions 2025 features latest clinical innovations in cardiology care

Tumor microenvironment dynamics: the regulatory influence of long non-coding RNAs

Research update: Plant-based calamari that rivals real seafood in texture

Rethinking stroke risk in patients with atherosclerotic carotid stenosis

New approach makes AI adaptable for computer vision in crop breeding

Moffitt Cancer Center launches new podcast, The ImmunoVerse, hosted by CEO Dr. Patrick Hwu

Evidence blasted into space: Mystery why some meteorites look less shocked solved

Immune system warriors predict the future of autoimmune blood vessel disease

Canadian experts urge protection for children from escalating heat in schools and child care settings

Awkward. Humans are still better than AI at reading the room

No more copy-pasting: DNA base editing for better Lactobacillus strains

AI provides reliable answers with less computational overhead

‘System rife with blame’ could threaten parents’ mental health when their kids struggle with school attendance

Nature positive: lots of rhetoric, little reality

Breakthrough approach for diagnosing TB could significantly improve detection

New era of aid cuts and conflict threatens educational lifeline of youngest learners

World Hormone Day 2025 – global endocrine community unites to raise public awareness of the small steps everyone can take towards good hormone health

Daily doses of peanuts tackle allergic reactions in adults

Herpes zoster vaccination and dementia occurrence

UTEP launches artificial intelligence think tank to address regional challenges

Sun earns UTA's highest research honor

Association for Chemoreception Sciences (AChemS) 47th Annual Meeting

Age-related genetic changes in the blood associated with poor cancer prognosis

Atomic imaging and AI offer new insights into motion of parasite behind sleeping sickness

[Press-News.org] CU researcher calls for improved firearm safety counseling by physicians