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Journal Article

Citation

Mitchell KJ, Hamby SL, Turner HA, Shattuck AM, Jones LM. Pediatrics 2015; 136(1): 10-17.

Affiliation

Crimes Against Children Research Center.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, American Academy of Pediatrics)

DOI

10.1542/peds.2014-3966

PMID

26055846

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To report the prevalence of weapons involved in the victimization of youth with particular emphasis on weapons with a "high lethality risk" and how such exposure fits into the broader victimization and life experiences of children and adolescents.

METHODS: Data were collected as part of the Second National Survey of Children's Exposure to Violence, a nationally representative telephone survey of youth ages 2 to 17 years and caregivers (N = 4114) conducted in 2011.

RESULTS: Estimates from the Second National Survey of Children's Exposure to Violence indicate that >17.5 million youth in the United States have been exposed to violence involving a weapon in their lifetimes as witnesses or victims, or >1 in 4 children. More than 2 million youth in the United States (1 in 33) have been directly assaulted in incidents where the high lethality risk weapons of guns and knives were used. Differences were noted between victimizations involving higher and lower lethality risk weapons as well as between any weapon involvement versus none. Poly-victims, youth with 7 or more victimization types, were particularly likely to experience victimization with any weapon, as well as victimization with a highly lethal weapon compared with nonpoly-victims.

CONCLUSIONS: Findings add to the field's broadening conceptualization of youth victimization highlighting the potentially highly consequential risk factor of weapon exposure as a component of victimization experiences on the mental health of youth. Further work on improving gun safety practices and taking steps to reduce children's exposure to weapon-involved violence is warranted to reduce this problem.


Language: en

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