You May Feel Some Pressure
                  
                    Article from NRA America's First Freedom Magazine, by Dave Kopel, June 18, 2015
                  
                
                 
                
              
              
                
                   
                  
                
              When you go to a doctor’s office, you expect that the doctor  will ask you some health-related questions, about such things as weight,  exercise, sleep and so on. Doctors adhere  to this “standard of care”—the term used for what an average, prudent doctor  would do—because that’s what they are trained to do, and because it’s necessary  in order to avoid malpractice lawsuits. 
              But some doctors are expanding the  standard to include asking you about firearms ownership and telling you that  all guns in the home should be unloaded and locked up, with the ammunition  locked separately. That begs some questions, such as: What will happen to you  if you disclose this personal information? What if you refuse to answer? 
              In San Francisco, a man honestly  answered his doctor’s questions about whether there were guns in the home. A  short time later, Child Protective Services arrived at the residence, and  demanded to be let inside so that they could inspect whether the guns were  locked up. 
              In Ocala, Fla., Amber Ullman took her  4-month-old baby to a pediatrician for shots and a checkup. When she refused to  answer the gun question, the doctor terminated the relationship and the mother  was given 30 days to find a new pediatrician.
              In the Chicago suburb of Oak Lawn, a  family brought their 16-year-old son to Advocate Children’s Hospital for a  tonsil infection. While taking the son’s medical history, the doctor asked the  parents to step out of the room. Then the doctor asked the teenager if there  were any guns in his home. (John Kass, “Doctor Probes Teen On Guns In The  Home,” Chicago  Tribune, Jan. 23, 2013.) 
              Although the family does not own firearms, the  mother was furious at the invasion of privacy. After all, her son was not there  because of suicidal risk or other psychiatric issues. The Woodward  News, of Woodward, Okla., ran an investigative story earlier this year,  asking “why this question is almost always now routinely included on programs  created by health care information software companies who market worldwide to  health care facilities and physician’s offices.” (Rachael Van Horn, “The Gun  Question,” Jan. 24, 2015.)
              The News report  focused on an Oklahoma woman’s story about going to a clinic for a case of the  flu. According to the woman, the nurse asked about family health history, such  as diabetes and cancer—and then asked the woman if she had any guns at  home. 
              The News  article explains that the gun question is most commonly asked in the course of  taking a patient’s medical history. It is especially common for Medicaid and  Medicare patients. 
              Pursuant to the 2009 Obama “stimulus,”  patient records are now being digitized. Physicians are rewarded with up to  $44,000 for adopting Electronic Medical Records (EMRS). If they do not adopt,  they are penalized by reduced Medicare and Medicaid reimbursements. (American Recovery  and Reinvestment Act of 2009, Pub. L. No. 111-5, § 4101, 123 Stat. 115; 42 U.S.  Code § 300jj-11(c)(3)(A)(ii).)
              EMRs can be helpful when a specialist  wants to look at your lifetime medical history from your general practitioner.  EMRs allow insurance companies and the government to process claims more  efficiently. 
              When EMRs include the gun question,  though, it means that the health care system is being used to accumulate  records of who owns guns. This is gun owner registration.
              What if you don’t like a doctor’s  intrusive and irrelevant questions about your personal life? In rural areas and  small towns, there may not be any other doctor available. In larger cities,  your ability to change medical providers is much smaller than it was 20 years  ago, and your ability to choose continues to shrink. 
              One of the objectives of  Obamacare is to force physicians to stop operating as independent small  businesses; rather, physicians are being squeezed to abandon independent  practice, and to become employees of large entities, such as hospital  chains. 
              In truth, federal law does not require that the gun question be included in  every medical history. The federal Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services  confirmed this fact to the Woodward News.
              The decision about the gun ownership  question is typically made by the large companies that lease EMR software to  doctors. Once that question is in the EMR program, 99 percent of medical  offices will just follow the EMR script and ask the question. Among the EMR  programs asking the gun question is Epic’s program, used by Kaiser Permanente  in southern California.
              So who is  pushing the software companies to include the gun question? Most of all, it’s  the American Academy of Pediatrics. AAP is the leading professional association  for pediatricians, and it publishes medical research on topics such as “Case  Report of Successful Treatment of Pallid Breath-Holding Spells With  Glycopyrrolate.” But for many years, the AAP has been under the control of  social justice warriors who believe deeply in the nanny state in general, and  gun prohibition in particular.  
              AAP’s best-known anti-gun spokesperson  is Dr. Katherine Christoffel, professor emeritus at Northwestern University’s  Feinberg School of Medicine. According to her, “Guns are a virus that must be  eradicated.” (J. Somerville, “Gun Control as immunization,” American  Medical News, Jan. 1994, p. 9.)
              The AAP’s “gun safety instruction”  manual is based on information from a gun prohibition organization, the Center  to Prevent Gun Violence (a group that later changed its name to “Brady  Center”). According to the manual, “The safest home is a home without guns.”  That is unless, of course, there is a home invasion, in which case the absence  of a gun leaves your family defenseless.
              The American Medical Association is  another supporter of the anti-gun agenda. For a quarter of a century, it, too,  has used its professional journal to promote anti-gun propaganda. 
              So if somebody writing EMR software  doesn’t know much about the gun debate, it’s easy to see why that person might  think including the gun question is just a routine part of medical history.  After all, that’s what the AAP and AMA have been promoting for years. 
              Dr. Timothy Wheeler is head of Doctors  for Responsible Gun Ownership. The group’s website is drgo.us, and it also has  a Facebook site. Wheeler  explains that physicians promoting an anti-gun agenda are violating medical  ethics by committing a “boundary violation.” 
              Because a patient is in a vulnerable  position, he or she can be especially susceptible to a doctor’s wishes—even if  those wishes have nothing to do with the doctor’s medical expertise. One  classic example of a boundary violation is a doctor initiating a sexual  relationship with a patient. Likewise, using the doctor-patient relationship to  convince a patient to make a particular financial investment is a boundary  violation, since doctors have no more expertise about investments than does the  general public.
              Wheeler argues that anti-gun counseling  is also a boundary violation. Unlike firearms safety instructors, or  criminologists who specialize in firearms study, doctors who have just read a  few slanted, inaccurate articles in the AAP journal Pediatrics are certainly not gun safety experts,  and they should not use the doctor-patient relationship to promote a political  agenda.
              So what is being done about the  problem?
              First of all, when Obamacare was moving  through Congress, the NRA acted to ensure that the program could not be used as  a formal legal basis for mandating inquiries and record-keeping about gun  ownership. Section 2716(c) of the Affordable Care Act is titled “Protection of  Second Amendment Gun Rights.”
              Subsection  (c)(1) states that “A wellness and health promotion activity” implemented under  Obamacare “may not require the disclosure or collection of any information  relating to” lawful possession or storage of firearms or ammunition in a  person’s residence. 
              The next subsection, (c)(2), states  that nothing in the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA, the  formal name for Obamacare) authorizes the collection of information about the  lawful possession or storage of firearms or ammunition.
              Finally, (c)(3) says that nothing in  the PPACA “shall be construed to authorize or may be used to maintain records  of individual ownership or possession of a firearm or ammunition.”
              This is certainly a good start, as it  prevents Obamacare from being used to mandate gun data collection. But  according to the Obama administration, it doesn’t prevent physicians from  asking the gun question—and recording the answer. 
              On Jan. 16, 2013, President Barack  Obama issued a host of executive actions about gun control. Eight days later,  the U.S. Department of Labor issued an FAQ about Obamacare implementation  (dol.gov/ebsa/faqs/faq-aca11.html). Question five was, “Does PHS Act section  2717(c) restrict communications between health care professionals and their  patients concerning firearms or ammunition?”
              The Obama administration’s answer: “No.  … The statute prohibits an organization operating a wellness or health  promotion program from requiring the disclosure of information relating to  certain information concerning firearms. However, nothing in this section  prohibits or otherwise limits communication between health care professionals  and their patients, including communications about firearms. Health care  providers can play an important role in promoting gun safety.”
              Regulation of the medical profession is  mostly a state issue, so the long-term solution will have to come from the  states. The reform leader here is Florida. The state’s landmark 1987 Right-to-Carry  law became that national model for fair and objective licensing of concealed  handgun carry for lawful protection. The Florida model has spread nationally,  as the state’s medical privacy reform likely will in the future.
              In 2011, the Florida Legislature  enacted the Florida Firearm Owners’ Privacy Act. Like the carry licensing law,  the 2011 reform came thanks to the hard work of Unified Sportsmen of Florida,  which is led by former NRA President Marion Hammer. The Privacy Act is codified  in Florida Statutes sections 381.026, 456.072 and 790.338. The core provisions  are in 790.338:
              
                1.	A health care practitioner may not enter “any disclosed information concerning firearm ownership into the patient’s medical record if the practitioner knows that such information is not relevant to the patient’s medical care or safety, or the safety of others.” So doctors, nurses, physicians’ assistants, etc., can enter the information when it is relevant. For example, the patient is having suicidal thoughts.
                2.	Health care practitioners “should refrain” from inquiries about guns in the home, unless they believe “that this information is relevant to the patient’s medical care or safety, or the safety of others.”
                3.	Emergency medical technicians and paramedics can ask about guns when “necessary to treat a patient” during a medical emergency. Or when the presence of a firearm “would pose an imminent danger or threat to the patient or others.”
                4.	Patients can decline to answer firearms questions. The patient’s decision not to answer “does not alter existing law regarding a physician’s authorization to choose his or her patients.”
                5.	Health care practitioners “may not discriminate against a patient based solely upon the patient’s exercise of the constitutional right to own and possess firearms or ammunition.”
                6.	Health care practitioners “shall respect a patient’s legal right to own or possess a firearm and should refrain from unnecessarily harassing a patient about firearm ownership during an examination.”
                7.	Insurance companies cannot “deny coverage, increase any premium or otherwise discriminate” against insurance application because of firearms ownership or storage. Insurers can still take into account the value of a firearms collection “in the setting of premiums for scheduled personal property coverage.” This provision applies not just to health insurance, but to all forms of insurance. It stops some insurance companies’ practice of denying homeowner’s insurance to gun owners.
                8.	Violations of subsections (1)-(4) are grounds for disciplinary action by the Board of Medicine of the Florida Department of Health.
              
              
                The ink was barely dry on the Florida Firearm Owners’ Privacy  Act before the American Academy of Pediatrics and its allies filed a lawsuit  against it.
              They won in federal district court, so  the case went to the 11th Circuit Court of Appeals. There, the NRA filed an amicus brief, which explained that the  Privacy Act protects patients “from doctors who wish to advocate against the  Constitution and disguise it as medical treatment, and then to make a permanent  record of the patient’s responses.” The NRA brief also pointed out that the  Privacy Act is consistent with other Florida laws protecting gun owner privacy,  such as the requirement that the names of concealed-carry licensees be kept  confidential, and the prohibition against creation of gun registries. 
              The 11th Circuit reversed the lower  court’s decision, and upheld the Privacy Act in Wollschlaeger  v. Florida, 760 F.3d 1195 (July 25, 2014). The opinion was written by  Judge Gerald Bard Tjoflat. As he explained, “the Act simply acknowledges that the  practice of good medicine does not require interrogation about irrelevant,  private matters.”
              The court noted that patients might be  concerned about “disclosing to a physician information regarding any number of  private topics when such information is not relevant to his or her medical  care.” For example, “religious or political affiliations, sexual preferences or  bank account balance.” The Privacy Act “merely circumscribes the unnecessary  collection of patient information on one of many potential sensitive topics.”  The Act’s purpose is “protecting a patient’s ability to receive effective  medical treatment without compromising the patient’s privacy with regard to  matters unrelated to health care.”
              The court reiterated that the Privacy  Act does not bar firearms questions when they are relevant, as in a “case of a  suicidal patient.” And because the Privacy Act only regulates speech “as part  of the practice of medicine,” which has always been “subject to reasonable  licensing and regulation,” the Privacy Act “does not offend the First  Amendment.” 
              The dissenting opinion argued that the  Privacy Act did violate the First Amendment. But the dissent, too, acknowledged  the Act was a response to a genuine problem.
               “The Legislature heard that: ... a  facility separated a mother from her children while interrogating them about  firearms; a physician refused to care for a 9-year-old boy because he wanted to  know about firearms in the home; citizens were falsely told that Medicaid  required them to disclose their firearm ownership and would not pay if they  refused to answer; a doctor refused to examine a child when the mother refused  to answer firearms questions; and a facility billed for services not delivered  after a family refused to answer questions about their firearms.”
              As this article goes to press, the  North Carolina Legislature is considering a similar reform measure. House Bill  562 is a wide-ranging bill to protect Second Amendment rights. Section 15  forbids doctors from using written forms to ask about gun ownership. If the  doctor makes a verbal inquiry, he or she must keep the patient’s answer  confidential “unless the patient has been adjudicated incompetent due to mental  illness.”
              When the NRA began taking Florida’s  Right-to-Carry model nationwide in the late 1980s, the NRA worked to pass the  best bills it could wherever possible. Some of the state laws were better than  Florida’s, and some were not as good. Since then, many of those Right-to-Carry  laws have been improved and strengthened. Limitations that were necessary to  pass a bill in the first place often have been removed by subsequent  legislatures, based on practical experience about how well Right-to-Carry  works. 
              Protecting  patient privacy likely will follow the same model. Every state needs this  reform. It will come sooner in some states than in others, and it will probably  take a long time to bring reform to all 50 states. In the meantime, you as a  patient can exercise your right to refuse to answer irrelevant questions, and  politely explain to your health care providers why you are refusing to do so.
              Wrong  Side? Everytown, Every Time 
              Never content to see laws on the books  that might in any way benefit law-abiding gun owners, Everytown for Gun Safety has launched an  online campaign against reforming medical privacy involving  firearms.
              The campaign, titled “Tell the NRA:  Stay Out of Our Doctor’s Offices,” is full of misleading information about such  laws, and even includes a petition to sign and send to the governor in states  where such measures are under consideration.
              Funded by billionaire Michael Bloomberg, the campaign is proof, once again,  that no matter what the issue, Everytown will always come down on the opposite  side of America’s peaceable gun owners. 
              
                
                   
                    
                      Article from NRA America's First Freedom Magazine, by Dave Kopel, June 18, 2015