Mental health consequences of exposure to mass and non-mass shootings in a national sample of US adults

IF 8.7
Jillian K. Peterson, James A. Densley, David C. Pyrooz
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Abstract

Gun violence exposure is a major public health issue in the United States, yet its mental health consequences remain insufficiently examined. This study investigates the short- and long-term psychological self-reported impacts of lifetime gun violence exposure using a cross-sectional survey of 10,000 respondents designed to be representative of US adults administered online by YouGov in January 2024. Findings revealed that 20.1% of respondents reported a mass shooting in their community, 18.3% had been threatened with a firearm, and 2.2% and 2.4% were injured in mass and non-mass shootings, respectively. Between 58.6% and 94.4% reported mental health consequences across exposure types, with younger individuals and women particularly vulnerable. While mass shootings corresponded with greater psychological distress, the long-term impacts, including post-traumatic stress, were reported at a higher rate following non-mass shootings. These findings promote trauma-informed public health interventions tailored to both individual and community-level needs in the aftermath of gun violence. This study reports short-term and long-term mental health outcomes across several forms of firearm violence exposure using data from an online survey of 10,000 US respondents administered by YouGov and identifies vulnerable groups.
在美国成年人的全国样本中,暴露于大规模和非大规模枪击事件对心理健康的影响
在美国,接触枪支暴力是一个重大的公共卫生问题,但其心理健康后果仍未得到充分研究。这项研究调查了终身接触枪支暴力的短期和长期心理自我报告的影响,采用了一项横断面调查,该调查由YouGov于2024年1月在线调查了10,000名受访者,这些受访者是美国成年人的代表。调查结果显示,20.1%的受访者表示在他们的社区发生过大规模枪击事件,18.3%的受访者曾受到枪支威胁,2.2%和2.4%的受访者分别在大规模和非大规模枪击事件中受伤。58.6%至94.4%的人报告了各种暴露类型对心理健康的影响,其中年轻人和妇女尤其脆弱。虽然大规模枪击事件与更大的心理困扰相对应,但据报道,非大规模枪击事件造成的长期影响,包括创伤后压力,在非大规模枪击事件后的比例更高。这些发现促进了针对枪支暴力后个人和社区需求的创伤知情公共卫生干预措施。这项研究利用YouGov对1万名美国受访者进行的在线调查数据,报告了几种形式的枪支暴力对短期和长期心理健康的影响,并确定了弱势群体。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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