UB Social Work Researcher Named to Co-lead the Grand Challenge to Prevent Gun Violence

A University at Buffalo social work researcher is among the leaders of a new national endeavor to prevent gun violence.

Patricia Logan-Greene, PhD, an associate professor and associate dean for academic affairs in the UB School of Social Work, will co-chair the American Academy of Social Work & Social Welfare’s (AASWW) Grand Challenge to Prevent Gun Violence.

The gun violence initiative is the 14th and latest addition to the AASWW’s Grand Challenges of Social Work, the organization’s collaborative flagship program that combines the scientific innovations generated through social work’s knowledge and research base with similar work being done by community leaders and professionals in other disciplines to address the nation’s most challenging social problems.

Logan-Greene will join co-chairs Deborah Gorman Smith, PhD, dean and Emily Klein Gidwitz Professor in the University of Chicago Crown Family School of Social Work, Policy, and Practice, and Neil B. Guterman, PhD, Paulette Goddard Professor of Social Work and dean emeritus at New York University School of Social Work, who submitted a proposal to the AASWW to lead the organization’s work in this new field of focus.

Firearms were the No. 1 killer of children and teens in the United States last year, having overtaken motor vehicle accidents as a leading cause of death, according to Logan Greene.

“There have been a number of highly successful public initiatives such as safer cars and safer car seats, and mandatory seat belt use, that have kept kids safer in motor vehicles,” says Logan-Greene. “We can’t eliminate motor vehicle deaths, nor will we be able to eliminate firearm deaths for kids, but gun deaths are increasing for children. “And it’s because there is so much backlash against the analogous public health measures that might prevent gun violence.

Logan-Greene says a rider to a 1997 spending bill known as the Dickey Amendment prohibited federally funded gun violence research for decades. Although some funds have been allotted to gun violence research in recent years, the prohibition significantly thwarted research, allowing for the problem of gun violence to grow. Some researchers are concerned that the lifting of the Dickey prohibitions is temporary.

“There are social work researchers doing excellent work on gun violence prevention, but the federal government is a major funder of basic research in this country,” says Logan-Greene. “Excluding any of that money from research to prevent gun violence is a terrible loss to people who might be affected by the problem and the front line clinicians looking for guidance about what they should do in practice.”

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