In a victory for gun owners who simply seek medical care, not political
philosophy, from their doctors, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the
Eleventh Circuit has upheld the NRA-supported Florida’s Firearm Owner’s
Privacy Act. This law was passed after an escalating series of events in
which patients were harassed or denied access to services because they
refused to be interrogated by their doctors about their ownership of
firearms. The case, Wollschlaeger v. Governor of Florida,
vindicated Florida’s attempt to protect patients from being forced to
divulge personal information that is irrelevant to their own medical
treatment.
In challenging the law, Dr. Wollschlaeger and the
other plaintiffs insisted they had a First Amendment right to routinely
grill patients on their choices concerning firearm ownership, without
regard to any good faith belief such information was relevant to the
patient’s individual case. They also alleged the law’s proscriptions
were unconstitutionally vague.
The Court of Appeals rejected
these claims. “The essence of the Act,” the court’s opinion stated, “is
simple: medical practitioners should not record information or inquire
about patients’ firearm-ownership status when doing so is not necessary
to providing the patient with good medical care.” Accordingly, the court
determined that “[t]he Act merely circumscribes the unnecessary
collection of patient information on one of many potential sensitive
topics.”
As the court noted, nothing in the Florida law
prohibits doctors from expressing their views about firearms or about
any other medical or public policy issue. Rather, the law is within
keeping of long-established “codes of conduct that define the practice
of good medicine and affirm the responsibility that physicians bear” and
“protects a patient’s ability to receive effective medical treatment
without compromising the patient’s privacy with regard to matters
unrelated to healthcare.”
http://www.nraila.org/legal/articles/2014/eleventh-circuit-upholds-florida-patient-privacy-law.aspx
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