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Section on Medical Students, Residents and Fellowship Trainees (SOMSRFT)

Section on Medical Students, Residents and Fellowship Trainees (SOMSRFT) Advocacy Campaign 2013-2014. Annual AAP SOMSRFT Advocacy Campaign. AAP Section on Medical Students, Residents and Fellowship Trainees (SOMSRFT) annual campaign focused on advocacy

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Section on Medical Students, Residents and Fellowship Trainees (SOMSRFT)

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  1. Section on Medical Students, Residents and Fellowship Trainees (SOMSRFT) Advocacy Campaign 2013-2014

  2. Annual AAP SOMSRFT Advocacy Campaign • AAP Section on Medical Students, Residents and Fellowship Trainees (SOMSRFT) annual campaign focused on advocacy • Provides a framework for YOU to get involved, learn about advocacy, and implement an advocacy project of your own • Successful campaigns in the past focused on smoking, vaccines, obesity, voting for kids, and childhood literacy (Read, Lead, Succeed!)

  3. Why Firearm Injury Prevention? • Events in • Newtown, Connecticut • Aurora, Colorado • Virginia Tech, Virginia • Personal/patient stories • Injuries • Gun violence exposure • Suicide • Homicide Public Health issue impacting children and families

  4. Injury Mortality Reports, National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, CDC, 2010; 2011 “CDF’s 2013 Gun Report." Protect Children Not Guns 2013. Children's Defense Fund, 24 July 2013. Web. Sept. 2013. Johnson, R. "Firearm Ownership and Storage Practices, U.S. Households, 1992?2002A Systematic Review." American Journal of Preventive Medicine 27.2 (2004): 173-82. Kellermann, Arthur L., Grant Somes, Frederick P. Rivara, Roberta K. Lee, and Joyce G. Banton. "Injuries and Deaths Due to Firearms in the Home." The Journal of Trauma: Injury, Infection, and Critical Care 45.2 (1998): 263-67. What We Know • Approximately 7.4 people per day are killed unintentionally by a gun1 • A child is killed or injured by a firearm every 30 minutes2 • 33% of U.S. homes contain a gun; half don’t lock it up3 • A firearm is 22x more likely to be used in the setting of suicide, criminal assault, homicide or accidental death than in self defense4 • Risk of suicide is 5x greater if a gun is kept in the home4

  5. What We Know • Number of kidskilled in 1 year by gun related injuries could fill134classrooms1 • In 2010 the # of children and teens killed by guns was ~5x the # of soldiers killed in Iraq and Afghanistan1 • Teens = most @ risk • 86% of deaths and 89% of injuries from firearms happen in 15-19 year olds1 1. “CDF’s 2013 Gun Report." Protect Children Not Guns 2013. Children's Defense Fund, 24 July 2013. Web. Sept. 2013.

  6. Firearm Injury Pyramid 31,672Deaths1 41,363Hospitalized Injuries2 42,656Treated & Released from EDs2 1 Centers for Disease Control National Vital Statistics, 20102 Estimates from the CDC Firearm Injury Surveillance Survey

  7. State and Federal Laws and Statistics • Learn about your state’s current gun laws, gun death and injury statistics, and federal public health stats by visiting: • AAP Division of State Government Affairs State Gun Safety Lawshttp://www.aap.org/en-us/my-aap/advocacy/state-government-affairs/Documents/GunSafetyLaws.pdf • Children’s Defense Fund Report “Protect Children, Not Guns”:http://www.childrensdefense.org/child-research-data-publications/data/protect-children-not-guns-2013.html • Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence State Scorecard:http://www.bradycampaign.org/stategunlaws/ • Law Center To Prevent Gun Violence: http://smartgunlaws.org/ • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) Web-based Injuries Statistics and Reporting System (WIQARS)http://www.cdc.gov/injury/wisqars/index.html • CDC’s National Violent Death Reporting System (NVDRS) http://www.cdc.gov/violenceprevention/nvdrs/

  8. What is Firearm Injury Prevention? • A public health issuejust like: • Car seats • Drowning prevention • Bike helmets • Seat Belts • Child abuse prevention • NOT a political issue! • Not about gun “control” or gun “rights” • About keeping kids/teens safe

  9. Three Main Advocacy Areas Goal: Keep Kids/Teens Safe Expand mental health screening and access Provide education and research about firearms Support common sense firearm legislation that protects kids

  10. How can you get involved?

  11. Firearm Injury Prevention: Clinic • Education, research, anticipatory guidance • Physician firearm counseling • Discuss during well child checks • Use firearm injury prevention smart phrase • QI projects regarding parent education before vs. after the campaign interventions • Start the discussion, bring awareness to the issue!

  12. Firearm Injury Prevention: Clinic • Create/distribute parent handouts • i.e. AAP Connected Kids • Display the 2013 P.A.V.E. poster • Educational commercial/video in waiting rooms • Dispensing of gun safe locks • Discuss teen violence, how to to avoid it, and ways to have positive conflict resolution • How to talk to children after a firearm-related injury

  13. Educate Parents and Patients • Safest way = no firearms in the home • Discuss the dangers of guns; they are not toys • ASK: Are guns in the homes where your children play? • Where is it stored? • How is it secured? • ASK Campaign Source: healthychildren.org

  14. Advice to Parents • For parents who choose to keep firearms in the home: • Always keep the gun unloaded and locked up  • Bullets locked and stored separately • Hide keys • Never tell child the lock/safe’s code • Discuss repercussions Source: healthychildren.org

  15. Firearms and Mental Health Strong evidence suggests that the presence of firearms in the home increases the risk of suicide among adolescents1 • Expand mental health screening and access • Screen for depression and mental illness • Recognize effects of toxic stress • Make appropriate and timely referrals • Give general and specific counseling! 1. Sege, Robert. “AAP Policy and Strategies to Protect Children from Firearms.” PowerPoint presentation. AAP Legislative Conference,Washington, DC. April 2013.

  16. Recognize the impact of firearm-related injuries • All children at risk of psychological injury • Anxiety • Posttraumatic stress reactions and disorder • Concern when prolonged emotional response or accompanied by functional impairment • Children are resilient given adequate support and counseling D Markenson, S Reynolds. The Pediatrician and Disaster Preparedness. Pediatrics 2006;117;e340. http://www.aap.org/en-us/my-aap/advocacy/workingwiththemedia/Pages/Coping-with-theAftermath-of-a-Community-or-School-Shooting

  17. Counseling after a firearm-related injury: Pediatricians • Guide parent to make necessary accommodations • Make appropriate and timely referrals • Children’s reaction based on developmental abilities • 6-year-old may react by refusing to separate from parents to attend school • Adolescent may attempt to hide concern, start to argue more with parents, decline in school D Markenson, S Reynolds. The Pediatrician and Disaster Preparedness. Pediatrics 2006;117;e340. http://www.aap.org/en-us/my-aap/advocacy/workingwiththemedia/Pages/Coping-with-theAftermath-of-a-Community-or-School-Shooting

  18. Counseling after a firearm-related injury: Parents and Teachers • Reassurance of safety, support, and love • Strengthen child’s communication and coping skills • Allow child to express feelings • Mobilize resources around child • Returning to the routine can be helpful, kids thrive on structure D Markenson, S Reynolds. The Pediatrician and Disaster Preparedness. Pediatrics 2006;117;e340.

  19. Firearm Injury Prevention: Community • Speak to school groups about firearms • Incorporate guest speakers impacted by firearm injury • Parent education at after school programs • Collaborate with law enforcement, Boys & Girls Club, community centers, etc. • Partner with ED/Trauma teams for high school education

  20. Firearm Injury Prevention: State/Federal Levels • Know your state’s laws • AAP Division of State Government Affairs State Gun Safety Laws:http://www.aap.org/en-us/my-aap/advocacy/state-government-affairs/Documents/GunSafetyLaws.pdf • Work with your AAP chapter to advocate for common sense firearm legislation that protects kids • Find your AAP chapter reps: http://www2.aap.org/member/chapters/chaplist.cfm

  21. Read AAP’s federal policy positions Contact your state and federal legislators Support common sense firearm legislation that protects kids P.A.V.E template letter & http://federaladvocacy.aap.org Organize or participate in a firearm injury prevention advocacy day Write an op-ed or letter to the editor Firearm Injury Prevention: State/Federal Levels

  22. Unified Part of the Campaign • 7th of every month • Engage in social media • Facebook SOMSRFT fan page • Twitter (#PAVE, #PutKids1st, #KeepKidsSafe) • Change profile photos to PAVE logo • Email blasts • Video testimonials • Visit our website: http://www2.aap.org/sections/ypn/r/advocacy/PAVE.html

  23. How to get involved with the National P.A.V.E. Campaign • Organize a project at your school/program, in your community, state, or AAP district • Join the SOMSRFT advocacy subcommittee • Advocate through social media • Participate on advocacy subcommittee conference calls

  24. Helpful Resources • AAP Council on Injury, Violence and Poison Prevention (COIVPP): http://www2.aap.org/sections/ipp/ • AAP Department of Federal Affairs: www.aap.org/federaladvocacy • AAP Mental Health Initiatives: http://www.aap.org/en-us/advocacy-and-policy/aap-health-initiatives/Mental-Health/Pages/default.aspx • AAP Division of State Government Affairs:http://www.aap.org/en-us/advocacy-and-policy/state-advocacy/Documents/Firearms_SLR.pdf • Healthy Children.org: http://www.healthychildren.org/English/safety-prevention/all-around/pages/Gun-Safety-Keeping-Children-Safe.aspx • Brady Campaign: http://www.bradycampaign.org/stategunlaws/ • Center to Prevent Youth Violence: http://www.cpyv.org/ • Children's Defense Fund:http://www.childrensdefense.org/programs-campaigns/protect-children-not-guns/ • Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America: www.momsdemandaction.org

  25. AAP SOMSRFT 2013-2014 Advocacy Subcommittee • Toluwalase Ajayi, MD • Lisa Costello, MD • Shana Godfred-Cato, DO • Wesley Henricksen, MD • Erin Kelly, MD • Ashley Lucke, MD • Anita Shah, DO • Natalie Stuntz, MD • Lie Tjoeng, MD • Elizabeth Van Dyne, MD • Shannon Brockman, MS3 • Neha Joshi, MS4 • Christian Pulcini, MS4 • Kristin Schwarz, MS4 • Puja Umaretiya, MS3 Acknowledgements/Thanks • Julie Raymond • Barbara Miller • Jamie Poslosky • Kimberly Rose Batti • Bonnie Kozial • Katie Crumley • Gina Steiner • AAP Council on Injury Violence and Poison Prevention • AAP Department Federal Affairs • AAP Division of State Government Affairs • Center to Prevent Youth Violence-ASK Campaign • Children’s Defense Fund • Brady Campaign

  26. Thank you! Together we will P.A.V.E the way to firearm injury prevention

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