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Correlates of handgun carrying among adolescents in the United States.

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Date
2012-07
Authors
Vaughn, Michael G
Perron, Brian E
Abdon, Arnelyn
Olate, René
Groom, Ralph
Wu, Li-Tzy
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Abstract
Weapon-related violence, especially the use of handguns, among adolescents is a serious public health concern. Using public-use data file from the adolescent sample (N = 17,842) in the 2008 National Survey on Drug Use and Health (NSDUH), this study examines the behavioral, parental involvement, and prevention correlates of handgun carrying. Overall, 3.1% of adolescents between the ages of 12 and 17 reported carrying a handgun in the past year. Results from a series of logistic regression models indicated that males, selling and using illicit drugs, were robustly associated with an increased probability of handgun carrying among adolescents. Furthermore, youth who carry handguns were significantly less likely to report a parent being involved in their lives and were significantly more likely to have encountered violence and drug prevention programming compared with youth who did not carry handguns. Implications of these results for prevention and policy are discussed.
Type
Journal article
Subject
Humans
Data Collection
Adolescent Behavior
Firearms
Adolescent
Child
United States
Female
Male
Permalink
https://hdl.handle.net/10161/20049
Published Version (Please cite this version)
10.1177/0886260511432150
Publication Info
Vaughn, Michael G; Perron, Brian E; Abdon, Arnelyn; Olate, René; Groom, Ralph; & Wu, Li-Tzy (2012). Correlates of handgun carrying among adolescents in the United States. Journal of interpersonal violence, 27(10). pp. 2003-2021. 10.1177/0886260511432150. Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/20049.
This is constructed from limited available data and may be imprecise. To cite this article, please review & use the official citation provided by the journal.
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Scholars@Duke

Wu

Li-Tzy Wu

Professor in Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
Education/Training: Pre- and post-doctoral training in mental health service research, psychiatric epidemiology (NIMH T32), and addiction epidemiology (NIDA T32) from Johns Hopkins University School of Public Health (Maryland); Fellow of the NIH Summer Institute on the Design and Conduct of Randomized Clinical Trials.Director: Duke Community Based Substance Use Disorder Research Program.Research interests: COVID-19, Opioid misuse, Opioid overdose, Opioid use disorder, Opio
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