Preventive medicine
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Preventive medicine · Jun 2023
The association between witnessing firearm violence and firearm carriage: Results from a national study of teens.
The association between witnessing firearm-involved violence and firearm carriage among teens, independent of non-firearm involved violence, has yet to be identified. The present analyses estimate associations of witnessing firearm-involved violence and non-firearm involved violence with firearm carriage in a nationally representative sample of teens. Data are from the FACTS National Survey-a cross-sectional web-based survey of 2140 US teenagers (ages 14-18) fielded in June-July 2020. ⋯ We found no difference in the strength of these associations (Wald χ2(df = 1) = 0.25, p = 0.80). Results suggest that witnessing firearm-involved and non-firearm involved violence are uniquely associated with teens' firearm carriage. Identifying means to reduce both exposures, in addition to recognizing factors that may weaken the associations between witnessing different types of violence and firearm carriage, may disrupt cycles of violence.
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Preventive medicine · Jun 2023
In-person school attendance and adolescent exposure to injury-related risk behaviors during the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States.
School closures during the COVID-19 pandemic have been reported to influence adolescents' behavioral health and may have altered their exposure to injury risk. We aimed to determine how in-person school attendance of individual adolescents in the United States during the pandemic was correlated with a range of risky health behaviors. We used self-reported data from adolescents 14-18 years old enrolled in grades 9-12 who participated in the 2020 Adolescent Behaviors and Experiences Survey. ⋯ Based on a multivariable analysis of 5202 students (65% attending school in-person) adjusted for age, sex, race, ethnicity, sexual orientation, parental unemployment, food insecurity, and homelessness, we found that in-person school attendance was associated with increased odds of every risk behavior except suicidal ideation and electronic bullying, with adjusted odds ratios ranging from 1.40 (95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.04, 1.88) for not wearing a seatbelt to 3.43 for IPV (95% CI: 1.97, 5.97). Our analyses demonstrate that in-person school attendance during the COVID-19 pandemic was associated with higher rates of risk behavior among adolescents. Further research is needed explore if this relationship is causal, and how these risks could be mitigated, as most adolescents have now returned to in-person schooling.
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Preventive medicine · Jun 2023
ReviewPrimary prevention interventions for adults at-risk of obesity: An international scoping review.
The number of adults experiencing obesity continues to rise. A significant amount of research has addressed primary prevention interventions within pediatric populations to minimize the onset of obesity. However, research efforts within adult populations have commonly emphasized secondary and tertiary prevention for obesity. ⋯ The following themes were revealed through this review: (1) participants were usually female and homogenous; (2) studies frequently occurred outside of the United States; (3) studies most often explored unimodal interventions; (4) dieticians and nurses were the most common intervention providers; and (5) favorable outcomes for reducing weight were demonstrated across studies. This scoping review reveals that primary prevention interventions have the potential to minimize obesity onset in at-risk adult populations. However, evaluation of current interventions shows multiple gaps in population target, intervention origin, intervention type, and provider type.