If it takes a pediatrician less than one minute per visit to talk to parents about how to securely store their firearms and offer a free cable lock, why do only 2% of doctors report routinely doing so?
Turns out, they might just need a “nudge” and a little extra support.
In the largest study of its kind, scientists at Northwestern University, the University of Pennsylvania, Henry Ford Health and Kaiser Permanente Colorado tested whether pediatricians were more likely to have these conversations and offer a free cable lock — via an evidence-based program called S.A.F.E. Firearm — if they received a “Nudge” or a “Nudge+.”
The “Nudge” consisted of a prompt in the clinician’s electronic health record (EHR) system to remind them to have the conversation with parents during the well visit. In the “Nudge+” scenario, clinicians received this reminder via the EHR system and received support from staff employed by their health system who helped problem solve logistics such as where to store hundreds of cable locks or how to navigate conversations with caregivers.
“We know we can save lives, and this study offers insights on how to scale this approach nationally,” said principal investigator Rinad Beidas, chair of the department of medical social sciences and the Ralph Seal Paffenbarger professor of medical social sciences at Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine. “This is a call to action.”
The study included 47,307 well-child visits of children ages 5 to 17 at 30 clinics in Michigan and Colorado. In the Nudge group, 22% of pediatricians delivered the S.A.F.E. Firearm program whereas 49% of pediatricians in the Nudge+ group delivered the program — a significant difference.
“Our clinical staff was very supportive of the program, especially when additional guidance was available,” said Brian Ahmedani, director of Henry Ford Health’s Center for Health Policy & Health Services Research. “Conversations around firearms can be uncomfortable. The support staff helped navigate how and when to introduce the topic and at what point to offer the cable lock.”
On average, each “Nudge+” program required only 8.7 hours of additional support per clinic over the year.
“We would have expected that we’d need far more resources for that kind of effect, but with less than an hour per month per clinic, it’s something that could be done in the real world without a lot of resources,” Beidas said.
One in three U.S. homes have a firearm
About one-third of U.S. children live in homes with firearms, and of these households, 43% contain at least one unlocked firearm. Previous research has shown individuals who have a conversation with their doctor about the importance of secure storage combined with the offer of a free cable lock were more likely to report improving their safe gun-storage practice.
Securely storing guns can reduce firearm-related injuries, which is the leading cause of death for young people in the U.S. In June, U.S. Surgeon General Vivek H. Murthy declared America’s firearm violence a public health crisis. In his advisory, Murthy calls out the need to conduct more implementation research to improve effectiveness of prevention strategies.
“Our study is the largest of such implementation trials, and I’m thrilled Dr. Murthy is spotlighting this type of research,” said Beidas, an internationally recognized leader in the field of implementation science. Her research focuses on designing, implementing and evaluating strategies to make it easier for clinicians, leaders and organizations to improve the quality and equity of health care.
Why don’t more pediatricians counsel on secure firearm storage?
There are numerous reasons why so few pediatricians discuss secure firearm storage with parents, Beidas said. Some are time-related or how comfortable the doctors are talking about it, whether it’s built into the workflow and if it is supported by leadership. But it’s also a divisive topic, and doctors and nurses find people are not comfortable sharing if they have a gun at home, Beidas said.
“So, our goal is to have pediatricians counsel everyone,” she said, explaining the program is for all kids — not just those at particular risk, such as having depression or being exposed to domestic violence. “Our goal is to help people be as safe as they can as often as they can, and our study demonstrates that this can be done in a non-political manner.”
Next steps: Expanding nationally, and locally
This study was conducted in only two states, but Beidas said her goal is to expand the effort nationally. First, she’d like to empirically show this type of national effort reduces firearm injury and mortality in young people. Second, she plans to expand this work beyond pediatric primary care to other health care settings.
“Our marker of effectiveness for this study was whether the clinicians did the program, but that’s not the final step of the cascade,” Beidas said. “We’ll have future papers that explore if the parents actually changed their firearm-storage behavior.”
Beidas is now funded to continue similar work in Illinois. She and Illinois partners recently were awarded a five-year, $3.3-million grant from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to study the implementation of the S.A.F.E. Firearm program in community health centers in Illinois. Parents at these health centers, which serve individuals who have limited access to health care and those who often experience health inequities, will receive counseling around secure firearm storage and free cable locks.
“Health centers serve our highest-need populations,” Beidas said. “Our team will collaborate with key constituents to best understand how clinicians can engage parents around secure firearm storage in a way that recognizes their lived experiences. For example, how to securely store firearms in the event of insecure housing, or in the face of extreme community violence.”
Notes
Funding for this study, which was published in JAMA Pediatrics, was provided by the National Institute of Mental Health, part of the National Institutes of Health and the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention.