Authors
Rebecca Cunningham, Lynda Knox, Joel Fein, Stephanie Harrison, Keri Frisch, Maureen Walton, Rochelle Dicker, Deane Calhoun, Marla Becker, Stephen W Hargarten
Publication date
2009/4/1
Source
Annals of emergency medicine
Volume
53
Issue
4
Pages
490-500
Publisher
Mosby
Description
Despite a decline in the incidence of homicide in recent years, the United States retains the highest youth homicide rate among the 26 wealthiest nations. Homicide is the second leading cause of death overall and the leading cause of death for male blacks aged 15 to 24 years. High rates of health care recidivism for violent injury, along with increasing research that demonstrates the effectiveness of violence prevention strategies in other arenas, dictate that physicians recognize violence as a complex preventable health problem and implement violence prevention activities into current practice rather than relegating violence prevention to the criminal justice arena. The emergency department (ED) and trauma center settings in many ways are uniquely positioned for this role. Exposure to firearm violence doubles the probability that a youth will commit violence within 2 years, and research shows that retaliatory injury …
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Scholar articles
R Cunningham, L Knox, J Fein, S Harrison, K Frisch… - Annals of emergency medicine, 2009