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1.
JAMA Netw Open ; 7(8): e2427683, 2024 Aug 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-39141384

RESUMEN

Importance: Firearm violence is a major public health problem in the US. However, relatively little research has focused particular attention on firearm violence in rural areas, and few studies have used research designs that draw on exogenous variation in the prevalence of firearms to estimate the association between firearm presence and shootings. Objective: To investigate the association between the start of deer hunting season and shootings in rural counties in the US. Design, Setting, and Participants: In this cohort study, data from all rural US counties in states with available data on the timing of deer hunting season were matched with data on shootings from the Gun Violence Archive from January 1, 2014, to December 31, 2021. Exposure: Shootings in the first 3 weeks of deer hunting season were compared with the week prior to the start of deer hunting season. Main Outcomes and Measures: The main outcome was daily total shootings. The association between the start of deer hunting season and shootings was estimated using Poisson regression models to analyze change within counties while controlling for relevant calendar year, month of year, and seasonal effects. Results: The sample included 854 rural counties with a mean (SD) population of 16 416 (18 329) per county and 5.4 (13.3) annual shootings per 100 000 people. The county fixed-effects specification analyzing the association between deer hunting season and shootings showed that relative to the week prior to deer hunting season, the incidence rate ratio for total shootings was 1.49 (95% CI, 1.13-1.95) for the first week of deer hunting season and 1.41 (95% CI, 1.02-1.94) for the second week of deer hunting season. Estimates remained consistent when excluding hunting accidents and were most pronounced in states with more hunting licenses per capita. Conclusions and Relevance: In this cohort study of the association between the start of deer hunting season and firearm violence, results showed that the start of deer hunting season was associated with a substantial increase in shootings. The findings highlight the role of firearm prevalence in gun violence and suggest the need for focused policies designed to reduce firearm violence in areas with substantial hunting activity during the first weeks of deer hunting season.


Asunto(s)
Ciervos , Armas de Fuego , Población Rural , Estaciones del Año , Humanos , Animales , Armas de Fuego/estadística & datos numéricos , Población Rural/estadística & datos numéricos , Estados Unidos/epidemiología , Heridas por Arma de Fuego/epidemiología , Masculino , Estudios de Cohortes , Femenino , Violencia con Armas/estadística & datos numéricos
3.
Epidemiology ; 34(6): 786-792, 2023 11 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37732847

RESUMEN

BACKGROUND: The recent rise of gun violence may lead to the perception that the problem of gun mortality in the United States is intractable. This article provides evidence to counter this perception by bringing attention to the period spanning from 1991 to 2016 when most US states implemented more restrictive gun laws. Over this period, the United States experienced a decline in household gun ownership, and gun-related deaths fell sharply. METHODS: The main analysis examines the conditional association between the change in gun regulations at the state level and the change in gun mortality from 1991 to 2016. We include a range of robustness checks and two instrumental variable analyses to allow for stronger causal inferences. RESULTS: We find strong, consistent evidence supporting the hypothesis that restrictive state gun policies reduce overall gun deaths, homicides committed with a gun, and suicides committed with a gun. Each additional restrictive gun regulation a given state passed from 1991 to 2016 was associated with -0.21 (95% confidence interval = -0.33, -0.08) gun deaths per 100,000 residents. Further, we find that specific policies, such as background checks and waiting periods for gun purchases, were associated with lower overall gun death rates, gun homicide rates, and gun suicide rates. CONCLUSION: State regulations passed from 1991 to 2016 were associated with substantial reductions in gun mortality. We estimate that restrictive state gun policies passed in 40 states from 1991 to 2016 averted 4297 gun deaths in 2016 alone, or roughly 11% of the total gun deaths that year.


Asunto(s)
Suicidio , Humanos , Homicidio , Políticas
4.
Prev Med ; 165(Pt A): 107184, 2022 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35933000

RESUMEN

Gun violence is frequently described in the language of epidemics. Yet, few quantitative studies have generated convincing evidence on the most basic question underlying the epidemic model of violence: Does violence at time t beget violence at time t + 1? With a sample of 98 of the 100 largest U.S. cities from 2014 to 2020, we employ an instrumental variable approach developed in (Jacob et al., 2007) that uses weather conditions in a given week to instrument for shootings in the same week. We find that throughout the entire period under study, shootings at week t have a negative or null effect on shootings at week t + 1 within cities. However, in years when cities went through sharp increases in gun violence, the prevalence of shootings in a given week has a strong, positive, causal effect on shootings in the following week. These results suggest that the relationship between current and subsequent violence is not static, but varies across different places and time periods. The results have implications for understanding how violence builds on itself during periods of sharp change.


Asunto(s)
Armas de Fuego , Violencia con Armas , Heridas por Arma de Fuego , Humanos , Violencia , Prevalencia , Heridas por Arma de Fuego/epidemiología
5.
Curr Opin Pharmacol ; 65: 102242, 2022 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35613504

RESUMEN

Autoimmune rheumatic diseases are characterised by an autoimmune inflammatory response to antigens of synovial tissue, muscles, and other organs. While the prognosis of these disorders has improved remarkably over recent years with the advent of biological therapeutics, prolonged drug-free remission is still rare. Advances in the understanding of the immunopathogenesis and response to immunotherapy of seropositive autoimmune rheumatic diseases, such as rheumatoid arthritis systemic lupus erythematosus, type 1 diabetes and the autoimmune-like celiac disease have revealed novel therapeutic opportunities. An improved understanding of preclinical disease states and how disease risk can be mitigated underpins further development of therapeutics to restore tolerance for disease prevention or early disease interception.


Asunto(s)
Artritis Reumatoide , Enfermedades Autoinmunes , Lupus Eritematoso Sistémico , Enfermedades Reumáticas , Enfermedades Autoinmunes/tratamiento farmacológico , Autoinmunidad , Humanos , Tolerancia Inmunológica
6.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 118(23)2021 06 08.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34074780

RESUMEN

Media coverage in the aftermath of mass shootings frequently documents expressions of sadness and outrage shared by millions of Americans. This type of collective emotion can be a powerful force in establishing shared objectives and motivating political actions. Yet, the rise in mass shootings has not translated into widespread legislative progress toward gun control across the nation. This study is designed to shed light on this puzzle by generating causal evidence on the temporal and geographic scale of collective emotional responses to mass shootings. Using a unique continuous survey on Americans' daily emotions without reference to specific events, our empirical strategy compares the daily emotions of residents interviewed after to those interviewed before 31 mass shootings within the same city or state where the event occurred. We found that the emotional impact of mass shootings is substantial, but it is local, short-lived, and politicized. These results suggest that if policy reform efforts are to draw on collective emotional responses to these events, they will likely have to start at the local level in the immediate aftermath of a mass shooting.


Asunto(s)
Emociones , Homicidio , Medios de Comunicación de Masas , Política , Armas de Fuego , Humanos , Estados Unidos
7.
RSF ; 5(2): 141-166, 2019 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31168474

RESUMEN

Does school climate ameliorate or exacerbate the impact of neighborhood violent crime on test scores? Using administrative data from the New York City Department of Education and the New York City Police Department, we find that exposure to violence in the residential neighborhood and an unsafe climate at school lead to substantial test score losses in English language arts (ELA). Middle school students exposed to neighborhood violent crime before the ELA exam who attend schools perceived to be less safe or to have a weak sense of community score 0.06 and 0.03 standard deviations lower, respectively. We find the largest negative effects for boys and Hispanic students in the least safe schools, and no effect of neighborhood crime for students attending schools with better climates.

8.
Demography ; 56(2): 645-663, 2019 04.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30838538

RESUMEN

Homicide is a leading cause of death for young people in the United States aged 15-34, but it has a disproportionate impact on one subset of the population: African American males. The national decline in homicide mortality that occurred from 1991 to 2014 thus provides an opportunity to generate evidence on a unique question-How do population health and health inequality change when the prevalence of one of the leading causes of death is cut in half? In this article, we estimate the impact of the decline in homicide mortality on life expectancy at birth as well as years of potential life lost for African American and white males and females, respectively. Estimates are generated using national mortality data by age, gender, race, and education level. Counterfactual estimates are constructed under the assumption of no change in mortality due to homicide from 1991 (the year when the national homicide rate reached its latest peak) to 2014 (the year when the homicide rate reached its trough). We estimate that the decline in homicides led to a 0.80-year increase in life expectancy at birth for African American males, and reduced years of potential life lost by 1,156 years for every 100,000 African American males. Results suggest that the drop in homicide represents a public health breakthrough for African American males, accounting for 17 % of the reduction in the life expectancy gap between white and African American males.


Asunto(s)
Negro o Afroamericano/estadística & datos numéricos , Homicidio/tendencias , Esperanza de Vida/tendencias , Mortalidad/tendencias , Adolescente , Adulto , Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, U.S. , Homicidio/estadística & datos numéricos , Humanos , Tablas de Vida , Masculino , Estados Unidos/epidemiología , Adulto Joven
9.
Child Dev ; 89(4): e323-e331, 2018 07.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28741650

RESUMEN

The data combine objectively measured sleep and thrice-daily salivary cortisol collected from a 4-day diary study in a large Midwestern city with location data on all violent crimes recorded during the same time period for N = 82 children (Mage  = 14.90, range = 11.27-18.11). The primary empirical strategy uses a within-person design to measure the change in sleep and cortisol from the person's typical pattern on the night/day immediately following a local violent crime. On the night following a violent crime, children have later bedtimes. Children also have disrupted cortisol patterns the following morning. Supplementary analyses using varying distances of the crime to the child's home address confirm more proximate crimes correspond to later bedtimes.


Asunto(s)
Crimen/psicología , Hidrocortisona/análisis , Sueño , Violencia/psicología , Adolescente , Niño , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino , Saliva/química , Sueño/fisiología , Vigilia/fisiología
10.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 112(16): 4994-8, 2015 Apr 21.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25848041

RESUMEN

The hypothesis of neighborhood stigma predicts that individuals who reside in areas known for high crime, poverty, disorder, and/or racial isolation embody the negative characteristics attributed to their communities and experience suspicion and mistrust in their interactions with strangers. This article provides an experimental test of whether neighborhood stigma affects individuals in one domain of social life: economic transactions. To evaluate the neighborhood stigma hypothesis, this study adopts an audit design in a locally organized, online classified market, using advertisements for used iPhones and randomly manipulating the neighborhood of the seller. The primary outcome under study is the number of responses generated by sellers from disadvantaged relative to advantaged neighborhoods. Advertisements from disadvantaged neighborhoods received significantly fewer responses than advertisements from advantaged neighborhoods. Results provide robust evidence that individuals from disadvantaged neighborhoods bear a stigma that influences their prospects in economic exchanges. The stigma is greater for advertisements originating from disadvantaged neighborhoods where the majority of residents are black. This evidence reveals that residence in a disadvantaged neighborhood not only affects individuals through mechanisms involving economic resources, institutional quality, and social networks but also affects residents through the perceptions of others.


Asunto(s)
Características de la Residencia , Estigma Social , Humanos , Modelos Teóricos , Factores Socioeconómicos , Factores de Tiempo
11.
J Health Soc Behav ; 56(1): 19-36, 2015 Mar.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25663176

RESUMEN

Research has shown robust relationships between community violence and psychopathology, yet relatively little is known about the ways in which community violence may affect cognitive performance and attention. The present study estimates the effects of police-reported community violence on 359 urban children's performance on a computerized neuropsychological task using a quasi-experimental fixed-effects design. Living in close proximity to a recent violent crime predicted faster but marginally less accurate task performance for the full sample, evolutionarily adaptive patterns of "vigilant" attention (i.e., less attention toward positive stimuli, more attention toward negative stimuli) for children reporting low trait anxiety, and potentially maladaptive patterns of "avoidant" attention for highly anxious children. These results suggest that community violence can directly affect children's cognitive performance while also having different (and potentially orthogonal) impacts on attention deployment depending on children's levels of biobehavioral risk. Implications for mental health and sociological research are discussed.


Asunto(s)
Atención/fisiología , Cognición/fisiología , Características de la Residencia , Violencia/psicología , Ansiedad/psicología , Chicago , Niño , Femenino , Humanos , Masculino , Salud Mental , Pruebas Neuropsicológicas
12.
Demography ; 52(1): 209-31, 2015 Feb.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25604847

RESUMEN

This article analyzes patterns of geographic migration of black and white American families over four consecutive generations. The analysis is based on a unique set of questions in the Panel Study of Income Dynamics (PSID) asking respondents about the counties and states in which their parents and grandparents were raised. Using this information along with the extensive geographic information available in the PSID survey, the article tracks the geographic locations of four generations of family members and considers the ways in which families and places are linked together over the course of a family's history. The patterns documented in the article are consistent with much of the demographic literature on the Great Migration of black Americans out of the South, but they reveal new insights into patterns of black migration after the Great Migration. In the most recent generation, black Americans have remained in place to a degree that is unique relative to the previous generation and relative to whites of the same generation. This new geographic immobility is the most pronounced change in black Americans' migration patterns after the Great Migration, and it is a pattern that has implications for the demography of black migration as well as the literature on racial inequality.


Asunto(s)
Negro o Afroamericano/estadística & datos numéricos , Migración Humana/estadística & datos numéricos , Población Blanca/estadística & datos numéricos , Factores de Edad , Humanos , Dinámica Poblacional , Factores Socioeconómicos , Factores de Tiempo , Estados Unidos
13.
AJS ; 119(4): 903-54, 2014 Jan.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25032266

RESUMEN

Ethnographic studies of the black middle class focus attention on the ways in which residential environments condition the experiences of different segments of the black class structure. This study places these arguments in a larger demographic context by providing a national analysis of neighborhood inequality and spatial inequality of different racial and ethnic groups in urban America. The findings show that there has been no change over time in the degree to which majority-black neighborhoods are surrounded by spatial disadvantage. Predominantly black neighborhoods, regardless of socioeconomic composition, continue to be spatially linked with areas of severe disadvantage. However, there has been substantial change in the degree to which middle- and upper-income African-American households have separated themselves from highly disadvantaged neighborhoods. These changes are driven primarily by the growing segment of middle- and upper-income African-Americans living in neighborhoods in which they are not the majority group, both in central cities and in suburbs.


Asunto(s)
Ciudades , Renta , Características de la Residencia , Población Urbana , Negro o Afroamericano , Demografía , Humanos , Factores Socioeconómicos , Estados Unidos
14.
Am J Public Health ; 102(12): 2287-93, 2012 Dec.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23078491

RESUMEN

OBJECTIVES: We examined whether the burden of violence in a child's community environment alters the child's behavior and functioning in the classroom setting. METHODS: To identify the effects of local violence, we exploited variation in the timing of local homicides, based on data from the Chicago Police Department, relative to the timing of interview assessments conducted as part of a randomized controlled trial conducted with preschoolers in Head Start programs from 2004-2006, the Chicago School Readiness Project. We compared children's scores when exposed to recent local violence with scores when no recent violence had occurred to identify causal effects. RESULTS: When children were assessed within a week of a homicide that occurred near their home, they exhibited lower levels of attention and impulse control and lower preacademic skills. The analysis showed strong positive effects of local violence on parental distress, providing suggestive evidence that parental responses may be a likely pathway by which local violence affects young children. CONCLUSIONS: Exposure to homicide generates acute psychological distress among caregivers and impairs children's self-regulatory behavior and cognitive functioning.


Asunto(s)
Atención , Conducta Impulsiva/etiología , Características de la Residencia , Violencia/psicología , Pruebas de Aptitud , Chicago/epidemiología , Preescolar , Femenino , Homicidio/psicología , Homicidio/estadística & datos numéricos , Humanos , Conducta Impulsiva/epidemiología , Conducta Impulsiva/psicología , Masculino , Salud Mental/estadística & datos numéricos , Padres/psicología , Pruebas Psicológicas , Características de la Residencia/estadística & datos numéricos , Violencia/estadística & datos numéricos
15.
Demography ; 49(3): 889-912, 2012 Aug.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22570056

RESUMEN

This article focuses on neighborhood and geographic change arising with the first "selection" of an independent residential setting: the transition out of the family home. Data from two sources-the Project on Human Development in Chicago Neighborhoods, and the Panel Study of Income Dynamics-are used to provide complementary analyses of trajectories of change in geographic location and neighborhood racial and economic composition during young adulthood. Findings indicate that for young adults who originate in segregated urban areas and remain in such areas, the period of young adulthood is characterized by continuity in neighborhood conditions and persistent racial inequality from childhood to adulthood. For young adults who exit highly segregated urban areas, this period is characterized by a substantial leveling of racial inequality, with African Americans moving into less-poor, less-segregated neighborhoods. However, the trend toward racial equality in young adulthood is temporary, as the gaps between whites and blacks grow as the young adults move further into adulthood. Crucial to the reemergence of racial inequality in neighborhood environments is the process of "unselected" change, or change in neighborhood conditions that occurs around young adults after they move to a new neighborhood environment.


Asunto(s)
Renta/estadística & datos numéricos , Grupos Raciales/estadística & datos numéricos , Características de la Residencia/estadística & datos numéricos , Adolescente , Adulto , Negro o Afroamericano/estadística & datos numéricos , Chicago , Femenino , Hispánicos o Latinos/estadística & datos numéricos , Humanos , Masculino , Áreas de Pobreza , Factores Socioeconómicos , Población Urbana/estadística & datos numéricos , Adulto Joven
16.
AJS ; 116(6): 1934-81, 2011 May.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21932471

RESUMEN

This study examines how the neighborhood environments experienced over multiple generations of a family influence children's cognitive ability. Building on recent research showing strong continuity in neighborhood environments across generations of family members, the authors argue for a revised perspective on "neighborhood effects" that considers the ways in which the neighborhood environment in one generation may have a lingering impact on the next generation. To analyze multigenerational effects, the authors use newly developed methods designed to estimate unbiased treatment effects when treatments and confounders vary over time. The results confirm a powerful link between neighborhoods and cognitive ability that extends across generations. A family's exposure to neighborhood poverty across two consecutive generations reduces child cognitive ability by more than half a standard deviation. A formal sensitivity analysis suggests that results are robust to unobserved selection bias.


Asunto(s)
Cognición , Ambiente , Relaciones Intergeneracionales , Pobreza/estadística & datos numéricos , Características de la Residencia/estadística & datos numéricos , Negro o Afroamericano/estadística & datos numéricos , Humanos , Factores Socioeconómicos , Sociología Médica , Población Blanca/estadística & datos numéricos
17.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 107(26): 11733-8, 2010 Jun 29.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20547862

RESUMEN

This study estimates the acute effect of exposure to a local homicide on the cognitive performance of children across a community. Data are from a sample of children age 5-17 y in the Project on Human Development in Chicago Neighborhoods. The effect of local homicides on vocabulary and reading assessments is identified by exploiting exogenous variation in the relative timing of homicides and interview assessments among children in the same neighborhood but assessed at different times. Among African-Americans, the strongest results show that exposure to a homicide in the block group that occurs less than a week before the assessment reduces performance on vocabulary and reading assessments by between approximately 0.5 and approximately 0.66 SD, respectively. Main results are replicated using a second independent dataset from Chicago. Findings suggest the need for broader recognition of the impact that extreme acts of violence have on children across a neighborhood, regardless of whether the violence is witnessed directly.


Asunto(s)
Cognición , Homicidio/psicología , Adolescente , Negro o Afroamericano/psicología , Chicago , Niño , Preescolar , Cognición/fisiología , Femenino , Humanos , Pruebas de Inteligencia , Estudios Longitudinales , Masculino , Estrés Fisiológico , Estrés Psicológico , Factores de Tiempo
18.
Criminology ; 48(3): 639-681, 2010 Aug 17.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21339847

RESUMEN

Two landmark policy interventions to improve the lives of youth through neighborhood mobility-the Gautreaux program in Chicago and the Moving to Opportunity experiments in five cities-have produced conflicting results and created a puzzle with broad implications: Do residential moves between neighborhoods increase or decrease violence, or both? To address this question we analyze data from a subsample of adolescents ages 9-12 from the Project on Human Development in Chicago Neighborhoods, a longitudinal study of children and their families that began in Chicago, the site of the original Gautreaux program and one of the MTO experiments. We propose a dynamic modeling strategy to separate the effects of residential moving over three waves of the study from dimensions of neighborhood change and metropolitan location. The results reveal countervailing effects of mobility on trajectories of violence: Whereas neighborhood moves within Chicago lead to an elevated risk of violence, moves outside of the city reduce violent offending and exposure to violence. The gap in violence between movers within and outside Chicago is explained not only by the racial and economic composition of the destination neighborhoods, but the quality of school contexts, adolescents' perceived control over their new environment, and fear. These findings highlight the need to consider simultaneously residential mobility, mechanisms of neighborhood change, and the wider geography of structural opportunity.

19.
Demography ; 45(1): 1-29, 2008 Feb.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18390289

RESUMEN

In this paper, we consider neighborhood selection as a social process central to the reproduction of racial inequality in neighborhood attainment. We formulate a multilevel model that decomposes multiple sources of stability and change in longitudinal trajectories of achieved neighborhood income among nearly 4000 Chicago families followed for up to seven years wherever they moved in the United States. Even after we adjust for a comprehensive set of fixed and time-varying covariates, racial inequality in neighborhood attainment is replicated by movers and stayers alike. We also study the emergent consequences of mobility pathways for neighborhood-level structure. The temporal sorting by individuals of different racial and ethnic groups combines to yield a structural pattern offlows between neighborhoods that generates virtually nonoverlapping income distributions and little exchange between minority and white areas. Selection and racially shaped hierarchies are thus mutually constituted and account for an apparent equilibrium of neighborhood inequality.


Asunto(s)
Toma de Decisiones , Vivienda , Prejuicio , Grupos Raciales , Clase Social , Justicia Social , Adolescente , Adulto , Chicago , Niño , Preescolar , Recolección de Datos , Demografía , Etnicidad , Femenino , Humanos , Illinois , Renta , Lactante , Recién Nacido , Masculino , Modelos Económicos , Pobreza , Factores Socioeconómicos , Estados Unidos
20.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 105(3): 845-52, 2008 Jan 22.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18093915

RESUMEN

Disparities in verbal ability, a major predictor of later life outcomes, have generated widespread debate, but few studies have been able to isolate neighborhood-level causes in a developmentally and ecologically appropriate way. This study presents longitudinal evidence from a large-scale study of >2,000 children ages 6-12 living in Chicago, along with their caretakers, who were followed wherever they moved in the U.S. for up to 7 years. African-American children are exposed in such disproportionate numbers to concentrated disadvantage that white and Latino children cannot be reliably compared, calling into question traditional research strategies assuming common points of overlap in ecological risk. We therefore focus on trajectories of verbal ability among African-American children, extending recently developed counterfactual methods for time-varying causes and outcomes to adjust for a wide range of predictors of selection into and out of neighborhoods. The results indicate that living in a severely disadvantaged neighborhood reduces the later verbal ability of black children on average by approximately 4 points, a magnitude that rivals missing a year or more of schooling.


Asunto(s)
Conducta Verbal/fisiología , Negro o Afroamericano/etnología , Chicago/etnología , Niño , Estudios de Cohortes , Humanos , Probabilidad , Factores de Tiempo
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