Ellicott C Matthay, Ariana N Gobaud, Charles C Branas, Katherine M Keyes, Brita Roy, Magdalena Cerdá
{"title":"Assessing Links Between Alcohol Exposure and Firearm Violence: A Scoping Review Update.","authors":"Ellicott C Matthay, Ariana N Gobaud, Charles C Branas, Katherine M Keyes, Brita Roy, Magdalena Cerdá","doi":"10.35946/arcr.v45.1.01","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<p><strong>Background: </strong>Firearm violence remains a leading cause of death and injury in the United States. Prior research supports that alcohol exposures, including individual-level alcohol use and alcohol control policies, are modifiable risk factors for firearm violence, yet additional research is needed to support prevention efforts.</p><p><strong>Objectives: </strong>This scoping review aims to update a prior 2016 systematic review on the links between alcohol exposure and firearm violence to examine whether current studies indicate causal links between alcohol use, alcohol interventions, and firearm violence-related outcomes.</p><p><strong>Eligibility criteria: </strong>Following the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses Extension for Scoping Reviews (PRISMA-ScR) guidelines, a comprehensive search of published studies was conducted, replicating the search strategy of the prior review but focusing on studies published since 2015. The review included published studies of humans, conducted in general populations of any age, gender, or racial/ethnic group, that examined the relationship between an alcohol-related exposure and an outcome involving firearm violence or risks for firearm violence. Excluded were small studies restricted to special populations, forensic or other technical studies, non-original research articles such as reviews, and studies that relied solely on descriptive statistics or did not adjust for confounders.</p><p><strong>Sources of evidence: </strong>The review included published studies indexed in PubMed, Web of Science, and Scopus. Eligible articles were published on or after January 1, 2015. The latest search was conducted on December 15, 2023.</p><p><strong>Charting methods: </strong>Using a structured data collection instrument, data were extracted on the characteristics of each study, including the dimension of alcohol exposure, the dimension of firearm violence, study population, study design, statistical analysis, source of funding, main findings, and whether effect measure modification was assessed and, if so, along what dimensions. Two authors independently conducted title/abstract screening, full-text screening, and data extraction until achieving 95% agreement, with discrepancies resolved through discussion.</p><p><strong>Results: </strong>The search yielded 797 studies. Of these, 754 were excluded and 43 met the final inclusion criteria. Studies addressed a range of alcohol exposures and firearm violence-related outcomes, primarily with cross-sectional study designs; 40% considered effect measure modification by any population characteristic. Findings from the 21 studies examining the relationship of individual-level alcohol use or alcohol use disorder (AUD) with firearm ownership, access, unsafe storage, or carrying indicated a strong and consistent positive association. Seven studies examined associations of individual-level alcohol use or AUD with firearm injury or death; these also indicated a pattern of positive associations, but the magnitude and precision of the estimates varied. Eight studies examined the impact of neighborhood proximity or density of alcohol outlets and found mixed results that were context- and study design-dependent. Two studies linked prior alcohol-related offenses to increased risk of firearm suicide and perpetration of violent firearm crimes among a large cohort of people who purchased handguns, and two studies linked policies prohibiting firearm access among individuals with a history of alcohol-related offenses to reductions in firearm homicide and suicide. Finally, four studies examined alcohol control policies and found that greater restrictiveness was generally associated with reductions in firearm homicide or firearm suicide.</p><p><strong>Conclusions: </strong>Findings from this scoping review continue to support a causal relationship between alcohol exposures and firearm violence that extends beyond acute alcohol use to include AUD and alcohol-related policies. Policies controlling the availability of alcohol and prohibiting firearm access among individuals with alcohol-related offense histories show promise for the prevention of firearm violence. Additional research examining differential impacts by population subgroup, alcohol use among perpetrators of firearm violence, policies restricting alcohol outlet density, and randomized or quasi-experimental study designs with longitudinal follow-up would further support inferences to inform prevention efforts.</p>","PeriodicalId":56367,"journal":{"name":"Alcohol research : current reviews","volume":"45 1","pages":"01"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2025-01-10","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11737877/pdf/","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Alcohol research : current reviews","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.35946/arcr.v45.1.01","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"2025/1/1 0:00:00","PubModel":"eCollection","JCR":"Q1","JCRName":"Psychology","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Firearm violence remains a leading cause of death and injury in the United States. Prior research supports that alcohol exposures, including individual-level alcohol use and alcohol control policies, are modifiable risk factors for firearm violence, yet additional research is needed to support prevention efforts.
Objectives: This scoping review aims to update a prior 2016 systematic review on the links between alcohol exposure and firearm violence to examine whether current studies indicate causal links between alcohol use, alcohol interventions, and firearm violence-related outcomes.
Eligibility criteria: Following the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses Extension for Scoping Reviews (PRISMA-ScR) guidelines, a comprehensive search of published studies was conducted, replicating the search strategy of the prior review but focusing on studies published since 2015. The review included published studies of humans, conducted in general populations of any age, gender, or racial/ethnic group, that examined the relationship between an alcohol-related exposure and an outcome involving firearm violence or risks for firearm violence. Excluded were small studies restricted to special populations, forensic or other technical studies, non-original research articles such as reviews, and studies that relied solely on descriptive statistics or did not adjust for confounders.
Sources of evidence: The review included published studies indexed in PubMed, Web of Science, and Scopus. Eligible articles were published on or after January 1, 2015. The latest search was conducted on December 15, 2023.
Charting methods: Using a structured data collection instrument, data were extracted on the characteristics of each study, including the dimension of alcohol exposure, the dimension of firearm violence, study population, study design, statistical analysis, source of funding, main findings, and whether effect measure modification was assessed and, if so, along what dimensions. Two authors independently conducted title/abstract screening, full-text screening, and data extraction until achieving 95% agreement, with discrepancies resolved through discussion.
Results: The search yielded 797 studies. Of these, 754 were excluded and 43 met the final inclusion criteria. Studies addressed a range of alcohol exposures and firearm violence-related outcomes, primarily with cross-sectional study designs; 40% considered effect measure modification by any population characteristic. Findings from the 21 studies examining the relationship of individual-level alcohol use or alcohol use disorder (AUD) with firearm ownership, access, unsafe storage, or carrying indicated a strong and consistent positive association. Seven studies examined associations of individual-level alcohol use or AUD with firearm injury or death; these also indicated a pattern of positive associations, but the magnitude and precision of the estimates varied. Eight studies examined the impact of neighborhood proximity or density of alcohol outlets and found mixed results that were context- and study design-dependent. Two studies linked prior alcohol-related offenses to increased risk of firearm suicide and perpetration of violent firearm crimes among a large cohort of people who purchased handguns, and two studies linked policies prohibiting firearm access among individuals with a history of alcohol-related offenses to reductions in firearm homicide and suicide. Finally, four studies examined alcohol control policies and found that greater restrictiveness was generally associated with reductions in firearm homicide or firearm suicide.
Conclusions: Findings from this scoping review continue to support a causal relationship between alcohol exposures and firearm violence that extends beyond acute alcohol use to include AUD and alcohol-related policies. Policies controlling the availability of alcohol and prohibiting firearm access among individuals with alcohol-related offense histories show promise for the prevention of firearm violence. Additional research examining differential impacts by population subgroup, alcohol use among perpetrators of firearm violence, policies restricting alcohol outlet density, and randomized or quasi-experimental study designs with longitudinal follow-up would further support inferences to inform prevention efforts.
背景:在美国,枪支暴力仍然是造成死亡和伤害的主要原因。先前的研究支持酒精暴露,包括个人层面的酒精使用和酒精控制政策,是枪支暴力的可改变风险因素,但需要进一步的研究来支持预防工作。目的:本综述旨在更新2016年之前关于酒精暴露与枪支暴力之间联系的系统综述,以检查当前的研究是否表明酒精使用、酒精干预和枪支暴力相关结果之间存在因果关系。入选标准:遵循系统评价和meta分析扩展范围评价(PRISMA-ScR)指南的首选报告项目,对已发表的研究进行了全面检索,复制先前综述的检索策略,但重点是2015年以来发表的研究。该综述包括已发表的人类研究,这些研究在任何年龄、性别或种族/族裔群体的一般人群中进行,研究了与酒精相关的暴露与涉及枪支暴力的结果或枪支暴力风险之间的关系。排除了仅限于特殊人群的小型研究、法医或其他技术研究、非原创研究文章(如综述)和仅依赖描述性统计或未调整混杂因素的研究。证据来源:该综述包括PubMed、Web of Science和Scopus索引的已发表研究。文章发表于2015年1月1日或之后。最近一次搜索是在2023年12月15日进行的。制图方法:使用结构化数据收集工具,提取有关每项研究特征的数据,包括酒精暴露维度、枪支暴力维度、研究人群、研究设计、统计分析、资金来源、主要发现,以及是否评估了效果测量的修改,如果评估了,则评估了哪些维度。两位作者独立进行标题/摘要筛选、全文筛选和数据提取,直到一致性达到95%,差异通过讨论解决。结果:搜索产生了797项研究。其中754例被排除,43例符合最终纳入标准。研究涉及一系列酒精暴露和枪支暴力相关的结果,主要采用横断面研究设计;40%的人考虑了任何群体特征的影响测量修改。21项研究调查了个人层面的酒精使用或酒精使用障碍(AUD)与枪支所有权、获取、不安全储存或携带的关系,结果表明两者之间存在强烈而一致的正相关。七项研究调查了个人水平的酒精使用或AUD与火器伤害或死亡的关系;这些也表明了一种积极关联的模式,但估计的幅度和精度各不相同。八项研究调查了邻近地区或酒精销售点密度的影响,发现了与环境和研究设计相关的混合结果。两项研究表明,在大量购买手枪的人群中,先前的酒精相关犯罪与枪支自杀和暴力枪支犯罪的风险增加有关,两项研究表明,禁止有酒精相关犯罪史的个人获得枪支的政策与枪支杀人和自杀的减少有关。最后,四项研究检查了酒精控制政策,发现更严格的限制通常与枪支杀人或枪支自杀的减少有关。结论:本范围综述的发现继续支持酒精暴露与枪支暴力之间的因果关系,其范围超出急性酒精使用,包括AUD和酒精相关政策。控制酒精供应和禁止有酒精相关犯罪历史的个人获得枪支的政策显示出预防枪支暴力的希望。进一步研究人群亚组、枪支暴力施暴者的酒精使用情况、限制酒精出口密度的政策以及随机或准实验研究设计的纵向随访将进一步支持推断,为预防工作提供信息。