Aguila Blanca
Staff
https://www.gunsamerica.com/blog/ma...ges-doctors-to-talk-gun-safety-with-patients/
According to Guns America, the Massachusetts Attorney General has asked doctors to talk to patients about gun safety, because it's a "public health" issue. In fact, according to the article, the AG's office has even put together a syllabus for the doctors to follow.
I think we have discussed previously the questionable medical ethics of doctors (who may or may not know anything at all about firearms) presuming to lecture patients about something that's a constitutional right. Many people (including me) think this is a professional "boundary violation" on the part of doctors who presume to do so (especially if those doctors are not themselves knowledgeable shooters and gun owners). Many of us have also previously expressed the opinion that "guns" are not a public health issue. You can't get a vaccine against a gunshot, and gunshot wounds are not spread by aerosol (coughing or sneezing), sharing a drinking glass or toothbrush, kissing, or sexual contact.
So now the Massachusetts AG has reportedly put her blessing on this boundary violation. As a dedicated conspiracy theorist, my immediate reaction is: "Why?" And the conspiracy theorist part of may brain says, maybe because the State of Massachusetts medical board has been receiving complaints from the public about doctors who do this, so the AG is doing this to provide "cover" for those doctors who engage in the practice.
I haven't heard or read much about this practice in recent months and I sort of hoped that maybe it had died down. Apparently it has not.
The fact remains that there are many other common factors in our lives that result in far more injuries and deaths. Why isn't there, for example, a corresponding program for doctors to "counsel" patients about bathtubs, and the dangers of slipping or drowning in the home bathtub?
According to Guns America, the Massachusetts Attorney General has asked doctors to talk to patients about gun safety, because it's a "public health" issue. In fact, according to the article, the AG's office has even put together a syllabus for the doctors to follow.
I think we have discussed previously the questionable medical ethics of doctors (who may or may not know anything at all about firearms) presuming to lecture patients about something that's a constitutional right. Many people (including me) think this is a professional "boundary violation" on the part of doctors who presume to do so (especially if those doctors are not themselves knowledgeable shooters and gun owners). Many of us have also previously expressed the opinion that "guns" are not a public health issue. You can't get a vaccine against a gunshot, and gunshot wounds are not spread by aerosol (coughing or sneezing), sharing a drinking glass or toothbrush, kissing, or sexual contact.
So now the Massachusetts AG has reportedly put her blessing on this boundary violation. As a dedicated conspiracy theorist, my immediate reaction is: "Why?" And the conspiracy theorist part of may brain says, maybe because the State of Massachusetts medical board has been receiving complaints from the public about doctors who do this, so the AG is doing this to provide "cover" for those doctors who engage in the practice.
I haven't heard or read much about this practice in recent months and I sort of hoped that maybe it had died down. Apparently it has not.
“Gun violence is a major public health threat and physicians can play a key role in curbing the violence by educating patients about the risks of gun ownership and encouraging our colleagues to talk to their patients,” said Gressner.
The fact remains that there are many other common factors in our lives that result in far more injuries and deaths. Why isn't there, for example, a corresponding program for doctors to "counsel" patients about bathtubs, and the dangers of slipping or drowning in the home bathtub?