OPINION - Editorial

Others say: Researching gun violence

Every mass shooting, most recently the slaughter at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Florida, brings a familiar and usually fruitless call and response. Gun control advocates urge tighter laws; gun rights advocates argue that those measures are too harsh or won't work.

What's missing from this debate are studies that provide evidence of strategies proven to reduce gun violence, and of those shown to have little or no effect. In that void, lots of people voice assertions that may or may not be accurate.

Why the dearth of data? One reason is that a 1996 congressional amendment barred the federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention from spending to "advocate or promote gun control." The amendment, sponsored by the late GOP Rep. Jay Dickey of Arkansas, for two decades has been credited--and blamed--for tamping down government-funded gun research.

That could change. Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar recently promised the CDC will resume research to find ways to curb gun violence. "We're in the science business and the evidence-generating business," Azar says, vowing the agency's researchers will be "certainly working in this field, as they do across the broad spectrum of disease control and prevention." Bravo.

Even Dickey apparently recognized the damage done by his amendment. Six years ago, he co-authored a Washington Post op-ed that called lawmakers' fears of such research "senseless." "We must learn what we can do to save lives," Dickey and his co-author wrote.

Gun violence is a public health crisis, as urgent and lethal as cigarette smoking or Ebola. There will be intense debate. Good. Let rival gun control and gun rights advocates debate the paths research should follow, argue the merits of studies, and poke holes in conclusions. That's how science works.

Many may not have believed the initial studies that showed a link between cigarette smoking and lung cancer. They shrugged off the dangers, or justified smoking for its pleasures. But the evidence of health risks grew overwhelming over time. So did the number of people who quit--or never started.

It's a rough analogy, but the overarching point is: Let's establish some evidence about the gun epidemic and what can curtail it. Then Americans can decide what additional gun measures, if any, they will support.

Editorial on 04/12/2018

Upcoming Events