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Medical Treatment Following Violence Exposure in a National Sample of Children and Youth

NCJ Number
303364
Journal
JAMA Network Open Volume: 4 Issue: 5 Dated: 2021
Author(s)
D. Finkelhor; et al
Date Published
2021
Annotation

The objective of this study was to characterize, using nationally representative data, the size and characteristics of the child and youth population being seen by medical authorities in the wake of violence exposure.

Abstract

Children and youth experience high rates of exposure to violence, which is associated with later poor physical and mental health outcomes. The immediate injuries and impacts from these exposures are often treated in emergency departments and medical offices. The current survey study used a representative sample of children and youth ages 2 to 17 years old, from two waves (2011 and 2014) of the National Survey of Children Exposed to Violence, drawn from a mix of random digit dialing and address-based sampling. Interviews were conducted  over the phone with caregivers of young children or  directly with the youth ages 10 to 17 years old. Data analysis was performed from September to December 2020. Exposures to violence were assessed with the 53-item Juvenile Victimization Questionnaire, which had follow-up questions that asked about injury and going “to the hospital, a doctor’s office, or some kind of health clinic because of what happened.” Additional questions were asked about lifetime and past-year childhood adversities and current trauma symptoms, using the Trauma Symptom Checklist and the Trauma Symptom Checklist for Young Children. The combined two-survey sample had 5,187 children and youth who reported a lifetime violence exposure, of whom 45.6 percent were ages 2 to 9 years, and 54.4 percent were ages 10 to 17 years old; 53.6 percent were male. Based on the full sample of 8,503 children and youth, 3.4 percent had a violence-related medical visit at some time in their lives. The rate of past-year medical visits due to a violence exposure was 1.9 percent, equivalent to a point estimate of approximately 1.4 million children and youth. Of those with medical visits, 33.3 percent were 2 to 9 years old. Those with a past-year visit had higher levels of trauma symptoms. adverse childhood experiences, and multiple violence exposures compared with the general sample of children and youth. The estimated large number of violence-related visits with medical professionals offers an opportunity to address a source of frequent injury and provide counseling and referral for a high-risk segment of the population to treat and prevent further physical and mental health and social consequences. (publisher abstract modified)