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      Heterogeneous effects of spatially proximate firearm homicide exposure on anxiety and depression symptoms among U.S. youth

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          Abstract

          The burden of firearm homicide in the United States is not evenly distributed across the population; rather, it disproportionately affects youth in disadvantaged and marginalized communities. Research is limited relevant to the impacts of exposure to firearm violence that occurs near where youth live or attend school – spatially proximate firearm violence – on youths' mental health and whether those impacts vary by characteristics that shape youths' risk for experiencing that exposure in the first place. Using a dataset linking the Fragile Families and Child Wellbeing Study with the Gun Violence Archive (N = 3086), we employed propensity score matching and multilevel stratification to examine average and heterogeneous associations between spatially proximate firearm homicide exposure and anxiety and depression among all youth and then separately for boys and girls. We found a statistically significant average association between firearm homicide exposure and symptoms of depression among youth. Furthermore, heterogeneous effects analyses yielded evidence that the average association is driven by youth, and particularly boys, who are the most disadvantaged and have the highest risk of firearm homicide exposure. The results of this study suggest that the accumulation of stressors associated with structural disadvantage and neighborhood disorder, coupled with exposure to spatially proximate and deadly firearm violence, may make boys and young men, particularly Black boys and young men, uniquely vulnerable to the mental health impacts of such exposure. Ancillary analyses of potential effect moderators suggest possible future areas of investigation.

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          mice: Multivariate Imputation by Chained Equations inR

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            Fragile Families: sample and design

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              Prevalence of Childhood Exposure to Violence, Crime, and Abuse: Results From the National Survey of Children's Exposure to Violence.

              It is important to estimate the burden of and trends for violence, crime, and abuse in the lives of children.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                0322116
                6595
                Prev Med
                Prev Med
                Preventive medicine
                0091-7435
                1096-0260
                21 July 2023
                December 2022
                25 August 2022
                31 July 2023
                : 165
                : Pt A
                : 107224
                Affiliations
                [a ]Violence Prevention Research Program, Department of Emergency Medicine, University of California, Davis School of Medicine, Sacramento, CA, USA
                [b ]Department of Human Ecology, University of California, Davis, Davis, CA, USA
                [c ]Department of Sociology & Criminology, Gonzaga University, Spokane, WA, USA
                Author notes
                [* ]Corresponding author at: Violence Prevention Research Program, Department of Emergency Medicine, University of California, Davis School of Medicine, 2315 Stockton Boulevard, Sacramento, CA 95817, USA. sabuggs@ 123456ucdavis.edu (S.A.L. Buggs).

                Author contributions

                SB, XZ, and NKW contributed to the initial conception and design of the work, and all authors contributed to subsequent modifications of the design. AB and NKW acquired the data. SB, XZ, and NKW contributed to data analysis. SB drafted the initial manuscript. All authors contributed to the interpretation of the results, offered critical revisions, and approved the submitted manuscript.

                Article
                NIHMS1917548
                10.1016/j.ypmed.2022.107224
                10388845
                36029922
                a7c95b08-70d9-497e-8f9c-d72d3ee76d57

                This is an open access article under the CC BY license ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

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                Categories
                Article

                Medicine
                firearm violence,community violence,race-ethnicity,youth,mental health,violence exposure,homicide
                Medicine
                firearm violence, community violence, race-ethnicity, youth, mental health, violence exposure, homicide

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