Group activities could reduce firearm violence among youth

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Participation in organized and group activities may play a key role in preventing firearm aggression among youth who have been exposed to violence or violent behaviors, according to a new study by researchers at U-M’s Institute for Firearm Injury Prevention.

“Our study supports the idea that engaging youth in supervised, prosocial activities is vital to help them feel connected to others for support and mentorship, which can break the cycle of victimization to violence — especially firearm violence,” said Marc Zimmerman, co-director of the institute and the Marshall H. Becker Collegiate Professor of Public Health in the School of Public Health.

Zimmerman and his colleagues are working with community partners to identify and implement solutions that address the leading cause of death among individuals ages 14 to 24 — among whom nearly 10,000 died as the result of a firearm injury in the United States in 2020.

Zimmerman partnered with Daniel Lee, research scientist at the Amherst H. Wilder Foundation, to launch the effort to identify ways in which youth exposure to violence could be directly or indirectly disrupted.

As part of their research, they analyzed survey data from more than 500 youth who sought care at Hurley Medical Center Emergency Department in Flint. They found that positive socializing and social ties to prosocial adults and peers may help younger youth regulate their emotional responses to exposure to violence and help them seek support from prosocial adults.

“This is an example of why rigorous firearm research is so important for the field — such studies can help researchers understand the pathways for interrupting the cycle of firearm violence and develop interventions to address the leading cause of death among U.S. youth,” said Patrick Carter, co-director of the institute and associate professor of emergency medicine in the Medical School.

The study, supported by a grant from the National Institute of Drug Abuse and the National Institute of Child Health and Development, shows that organized activities also may mitigate the association between retaliatory attitudes and firearm aggression.

To address retaliatory attitudes as a potential factor linking exposure to violence and firearm aggression, the researchers suggest that increased organized activity opportunities for youth dealing with exposure to violence could provide a multitude of benefits.

Study results indicate that social, psychological and developmental benefits, such as academic engagement, mentorship, prosocial behaviors and others, may serve as a vital strategy for preventing firearm aggression among youth, and more research is needed to examine how organized activity participation offers protection against firearm aggression.

This study is one of many community-engagement projects being led by the Institute for Firearm Injury Prevention, which launched last summer as part of a $10 million university commitment to generate new knowledge and advance innovative solutions to reduce firearm injury, while respecting the rights of law-abiding citizens to legally own firearms.

“Retaliatory attitudes is a point of intervention for disrupting the well-documented link between exposure to violence and firearm aggression among youth,” Lee said.

“Participating in organized activities like extracurricular school activities can attenuate the influence of retaliatory attitudes on firearm aggression and may be a viable strategy for preventing firearm aggression for youth exposed to violence.”

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