Original articleAdolescents' exposure to community and school violence: Prevalence and behavioral correlates
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2020, Children and Youth Services ReviewRacial and ethnic differences in associations of community violence with self-harm: a population-based case–control study
2019, Annals of EpidemiologyCitation Excerpt :Finally, there is substantial heterogeneity within racial–ethnic groups; future studies would benefit from further disaggregation. Community violence is an important, understudied, and potentially modifiable [51–54] feature of the social environment that disproportionately affects poor, racially, and ethnically segregated urban neighborhoods [34,55,56]. This study enhances our understanding of the contextual factors driving self-harm and builds on a growing body of literature documenting the health consequences and health equity concerns of exposure to community violence and the potential benefits of investing in violence prevention.
Brief report: Examining children's disruptive behavior in the wake of trauma - A two-piece growth curve model before and after a school shooting
2015, Journal of AdolescenceCitation Excerpt :Further, such distressing incidents have the potential to prompt reactionary, aggressive, disruptive behaviors among school children. Witnessing school or community violence has been linked to higher adolescent aggressive behaviors (Lambert, Boyd, Cammack, & Ialongo, 2012; O'Keefe, 1997; Schwab-Stone et al., 1999), though findings are mixed (Mrug & Windle, 2010). Due to the unpredictable nature of single-incident traumas, few studies have evaluated consequences using longitudinal data spanning large time windows before and afterward.
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