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Community Violence and Youth: Affect, Behavior, Substance Use, and Academics

Community violence is recognized as a major public health problem (WHO, World Report on Violence and Health,2002) that Americans increasingly understand has adverse implications beyond inner-cities. However, the majority of research on chronic community violence exposure focuses on ethnic minority,...

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Autores principales: Cooley-Strickland, Michele, Quille, Tanya J., Griffin, Robert S., Stuart, Elizabeth A., Bradshaw, Catherine P., Furr-Holden, Debra
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Springer US 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2700237/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19472053
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10567-009-0051-6
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author Cooley-Strickland, Michele
Quille, Tanya J.
Griffin, Robert S.
Stuart, Elizabeth A.
Bradshaw, Catherine P.
Furr-Holden, Debra
author_facet Cooley-Strickland, Michele
Quille, Tanya J.
Griffin, Robert S.
Stuart, Elizabeth A.
Bradshaw, Catherine P.
Furr-Holden, Debra
author_sort Cooley-Strickland, Michele
collection PubMed
description Community violence is recognized as a major public health problem (WHO, World Report on Violence and Health,2002) that Americans increasingly understand has adverse implications beyond inner-cities. However, the majority of research on chronic community violence exposure focuses on ethnic minority, impoverished, and/or crime-ridden communities while treatment and prevention focuses on the perpetrators of the violence, not on the youth who are its direct or indirect victims. School-based treatment and preventive interventions are needed for children at elevated risk for exposure to community violence. In preparation, a longitudinal, community epidemiological study, The Multiple Opportunities to Reach Excellence (MORE) Project, is being fielded to address some of the methodological weaknesses presented in previous studies. This study was designed to better understand the impact of children’s chronic exposure to community violence on their emotional, behavioral, substance use, and academic functioning with an overarching goal to identify malleable risk and protective factors which can be targeted in preventive and intervention programs. This paper describes the MORE Project, its conceptual underpinnings, goals, and methodology, as well as implications for treatment and preventive interventions and future research.
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spelling pubmed-27002372009-06-23 Community Violence and Youth: Affect, Behavior, Substance Use, and Academics Cooley-Strickland, Michele Quille, Tanya J. Griffin, Robert S. Stuart, Elizabeth A. Bradshaw, Catherine P. Furr-Holden, Debra Clin Child Fam Psychol Rev Article Community violence is recognized as a major public health problem (WHO, World Report on Violence and Health,2002) that Americans increasingly understand has adverse implications beyond inner-cities. However, the majority of research on chronic community violence exposure focuses on ethnic minority, impoverished, and/or crime-ridden communities while treatment and prevention focuses on the perpetrators of the violence, not on the youth who are its direct or indirect victims. School-based treatment and preventive interventions are needed for children at elevated risk for exposure to community violence. In preparation, a longitudinal, community epidemiological study, The Multiple Opportunities to Reach Excellence (MORE) Project, is being fielded to address some of the methodological weaknesses presented in previous studies. This study was designed to better understand the impact of children’s chronic exposure to community violence on their emotional, behavioral, substance use, and academic functioning with an overarching goal to identify malleable risk and protective factors which can be targeted in preventive and intervention programs. This paper describes the MORE Project, its conceptual underpinnings, goals, and methodology, as well as implications for treatment and preventive interventions and future research. Springer US 2009-05-27 2009-06 /pmc/articles/PMC2700237/ /pubmed/19472053 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10567-009-0051-6 Text en © The Author(s) 2009
spellingShingle Article
Cooley-Strickland, Michele
Quille, Tanya J.
Griffin, Robert S.
Stuart, Elizabeth A.
Bradshaw, Catherine P.
Furr-Holden, Debra
Community Violence and Youth: Affect, Behavior, Substance Use, and Academics
title Community Violence and Youth: Affect, Behavior, Substance Use, and Academics
title_full Community Violence and Youth: Affect, Behavior, Substance Use, and Academics
title_fullStr Community Violence and Youth: Affect, Behavior, Substance Use, and Academics
title_full_unstemmed Community Violence and Youth: Affect, Behavior, Substance Use, and Academics
title_short Community Violence and Youth: Affect, Behavior, Substance Use, and Academics
title_sort community violence and youth: affect, behavior, substance use, and academics
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2700237/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19472053
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10567-009-0051-6
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