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f you thought
that the million moms were bad, just wait until you hear from the
six hundred thousand docs. Next time you
go for a check-up, you just might. Doctors Against Handgun Injury
(a new coalition of organizations representing two-thirds of this
country's physicians) is suggesting that "health professionals and
health systems should ask [patients] about gun ownership when taking
a medical history or engaging in preventive counseling." By itself,
intrusive questioning is not enough, of course. The interrogation
has to be followed by a lecture. "Patients should be provided with
information about the risks of having a gun in the home, as well as
methods to reduce the risk, should the ignorant peasants continue
to choose to keep them."
OK, so I added in the "ignorant peasants," but, have no doubt, a
snooty assumption of technocratic superiority is indeed what underpins
this latest anti-gun initiative. To the folks at DAHI, the rate
of gun-related injury is an epidemiological issue, and like any
other infectious disease, it is best to leave its control to the
medical profession. It is a ludicrous argument, but to the people
making it, it comes with one great advantage: Skill with the scalpel
or the stethoscope is magically transformed into the right to act
as an arbiter in a far wider field than the ER or the hospital ward.
Those who are not as qualified are expected to watch in awe as these
lab-coated loudmouths issue their self-important prescription for
"public safety," a series of policy initiatives that have little
or nothing to do with the practice of medicine.
With the exception of the proposed weapons counseling, DAHI's prescription
itself is fairly standard gun-control boilerplate, the usual thin
end of the anti-Second Amendment wedge. DAHI's agenda includes an
extension of the Brady background checks, restrictions on the number
of guns that can be bought within a given period, and, of course,
that stalker-friendly favorite, the imposition of an interval "between
the time an individual purchases a weapon and the time s/he takes
possession of it."
As ideas they are nonsense, of course, but what makes these suggested
"interventions" (as they are pretentiously labeled) particularly
offensive is the way that they are an abuse of the aura and the
authority of the physician. By pretending that these measures are
a "healthcare" issue, DAHI is attempting to push through a partisan
program without the bother of going through the normal political
debate. Such debate may be messy, but it is essential part of democracy.
These lordly doctors, seem to above such petty considerations.
Perhaps even worse, they also appear to consider themselves to be
above the standards of accuracy and objectivity that we are traditionally
entitled to expect from our physicians. To take a couple of examples,
visitors to DAHI's
website will, amid talk of "carnage," grudgingly be told that
there has been a fall in gun-related deaths since 1993. It is explained,
however, that this fall is at least "partly" attributable to the
Brady Law. The fact that the decline began a year or two before
the law came into force is not referred to, nor is there any analysis
of how many lives might be saved by the defensive use of guns. Similarly,
there is plenty of focus on accidental death from firearms, but
no mention of the fact that, between 1980 and the late 1990s this
total fell by nearly a half, despite rapidly rising levels of gun
ownership. Tragic though it is, the death toll from firearms accidents
is smaller than that from drowning, burning, or even simply falling
over. It is not much larger than the number who come to their end
while engaged in recreational boating, and it is less than one-thirtieth
of the total killed in motor vehicle accidents.
DAHI's selective use of statistical data might be acceptable in
the normal course of political polemic, but coming from people who
are portraying themselves as participants in this debate on the
basis of their "expertise and experience as physicians," it is a
disgrace. DAHI tell us that "presenting basic facts and helping
patients make informed decisions" is part of the doctor's job. If
their website is any indicator as to how they judge the "basic facts,"
these physicians have a very strange way of going about their work.
After seeing what he had to say to the press, I would not even accept
an aspirin from one of DAHI's leaders, Dr. Jeremiah Barondess, without
a second opinion. In an interview with the New York Observer,
Dr. Barondess, president of the important-sounding New York Academy
of Medicine, felt able to claim that the pressure group was "neutral
politically, academically and intellectually," an assertion that
reveals the contempt he must feel for the reasoning powers of that
newspaper's readers.
The extent of DAHI's "intellectual neutrality" can be seen from
its approach to the "basic facts" discussed above. Quite what is
meant by "academically neutral" is unclear, but it seems to include
the publication of a key position paper that manages to cite such
sources as the New Republic, the ABA's Coordinating Committee
on Gun Violence, Congressman Patrick Kennedy, Senator Robert Torricelli,
the Center to Prevent Handgun Violence, the American Prospect
(twice), the Handgun Epidemic Lowering Plan, and the Cincinnati
Post. The work of prominent gun-control skeptics such as Yale's
John Lott Jr. does not, however, even merit a mention. Professor
Lott is not alone. There's no room for the work of obscure gun-control
skeptics, either. What of DAHI's supposed political neutrality?
Of all the politicians who have looked into the issue of gun control,
the organization only chooses to quote two liberal Democrats.
Dr. Barondess prefers, of course, to avoid such matters, preferring
to repeat DAHI's dishonest dogma, "handgun injury
is like a
disease
and we're going to introduce mandatory immunizations
for this disease." It is difficult to decide which is the more repellent,
the fraudulent assertion of "neutrality" or the creepily totalitarian
claim that "we" are going to introduce these "mandatory" immunizations.
It can be no surprise, therefore, that in their legislative crusade,
DAHI's physicians reveal a fundamental misunderstanding of the doctor/patient
relationship. As private individuals they are free to campaign for
any legislation that they choose, but when they do so in their capacity
as doctors, they should take care. Laws are coercive. The physician
who uses his professional qualification to press for DAHI-style
legislation is, essentially, arguing that he has the right to tell
his patients what to do. This is not what doctors are for. The role
of a physician is to listen, to diagnose, and to give advice. A
course of treatment is a suggestion, not an order. It must, in the
end, be left to the patient, however misguided, to decide what to
do.
That would be true, even if the advice were good. In this case it
could be lethal. The proposed legislative changes will make it harder
for law-abiding people to exercise their Second Amendment rights,
something which flies in the face of evidence that such a development
may in fact cost lives, evidence that Dr. Barondess and his friends
are either too arrogant to consider or too disingenuous to discuss.
Worst of all, even if DAHI is unsuccessful in promoting its legislative
agenda, the organization's supposedly objective "counseling" will,
in the meantime, be likely to discourage people from keeping the
means of self defense that they already have. As is noted on the
DAHI website, "there is precedent for the view that [the counseling]
would be helpful
in the context of removing guns from the home."
That is probably right. To the people in their care, doctors can
be very persuasive, especially when the "basic facts" are presented
in such a one-sided way. And when patients are misled on the advantages
and disadvantages of gun ownership, truth may not be the only casualty.
Bullying someone into giving up an effective means of self-defense
may prove, quite literally, fatal. For the patient, that is. The
consequences for the doctor will be rather less severe. In an unlikely,
but deserved, worst case, he may risk a malpractice lawsuit, a threat
to livelihood rather than life. Presumably it is in response to
this somewhat remote danger that DAHI's cyber-offering includes
the disclaimer that, "nothing in this web site is intended to be
construed or to serve as a standard of medical care." Like all the
best disclaimers, it contradicts everything that has gone before.
But it's a start.
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