• Preventive medicine · Dec 2022

    Understanding factors associated with firearm possession: Examining differences between male and female adolescents and emerging adults seeking emergency department care.

    • Karissa R Pelletier, Carissa J Schmidt, Laura Seewald, Rebecca M Cunningham, Marc A Zimmerman, Maureen A Walton, Ken Resnicow, and Patrick M Carter.
    • UM Institute for Firearm Injury Prevention, University of Michigan, 1109 Geddes Ave, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, United States of America. Electronic address: pelletik@umich.edu.
    • Prev Med. 2022 Dec 1; 165 (Pt A): 107286107286.

    AbstractFirearm possession increases the likelihood of hospital visits among adolescents and emerging adults for both males and females. To better inform prevention practices, we examine data among adolescents and emerging adults (A/EAs; ages 16 to 29) presenting to an urban emergency department for any reason to understand the differences in firearm possession between males and females (N = 1312; 29.6% male; 50.5% Black). Regression identified firearm possession correlates, such as male sex (AOR = 2.26), firearm attitudes (AOR = 1.23), peer firearm possession (AOR = 9.84), and community violence exposure (AOR = 1.02). When stratified by sex (e.g., male vs female), regression results yielded differences in correlates for firearm possession: in males, peer firearm possession (AOR = 8.96) were significant, and in females, firearm attitudes (AOR = 1.33) and peer firearm possession (AOR = 11.24) were significant. An interaction between sex and firearm attitudes demonstrated that firearm attitudes were differentially associated with firearm possession between female and male A/EAs (AOR = 1.28). Overall, we found that females are more likely to endorse retaliatory firearm attitudes, and both males and females are highly influenced by their perception of peer firearm possession. These results help inform prevention strategies across multiple settings, especially for hospital-based violence interventions, and suggest that tailored approaches addressing differences between male and female A/EAs are appropriate when addressing firearm violence and injury risk among A/EAs.Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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