Authors
Garen J Wintemute, Marian E Betz, Megan L Ranney
Publication date
2016/8/2
Source
Annals of Internal Medicine
Volume
165
Issue
3
Pages
205-213
Publisher
American College of Physicians
Description
Physicians have unique opportunities to help prevent firearm violence. Concern has developed that federal and state laws or regulations prohibit physicians from asking or counseling patients about firearms and disclosing patient information about firearms to others, even when threats to health and safety may be involved. This is not the case. In this article, the authors explain the statutes in question, emphasizing that physicians may ask about firearms (with rare exceptions), may counsel about firearms as they do about other health matters, and may disclose information to third parties when necessary. The authors then review circumstances under which questions about firearms might be most appropriate if they are not asked routinely. Such circumstances include instances when the patient provides information or exhibits behavior suggesting an acutely increased risk for violence, whether to himself or others, or …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
GJ Wintemute, ME Betz, ML Ranney - Annals of Internal Medicine, 2016