Objectives Correlations among resilience against violent behavior toward the self and others, ruminations, and anger were examined to obtain data for preventive interventions for violent behavior toward the self and others in high school students.Methods An anonymous self-report questionnaire was administered to first, second, and third-year high school students (N=327). There were 280 valid responses (85.6%). The following causal model was assumed based on the data: Resilience directly affects violent behavior toward the self and others and simultaneously affects violent behavior through rumination and anger. The goodness of fit of the model and correlations among variables were analyzed using structural equation modeling, with gender and school year as control variables.Results The goodness of fit of the model to the data indicated that the comparative fit index was 0.980 and the root mean square error of approximation was 0.043. Statistically significant negative correlations among the variables were indicated between resilience and rumination and between violent behavior toward the self and others. On the other hand, statistically significant positive correlations were indicated between rumination and anger and between anger and violent behavior toward the self and others. The contribution ratio of the model to violent behavior was 82.9%. Furthermore, gender, which was one of the control variables, had a statistically significant positive correlation with resilience and a negative correlation with violent behavior.Conclusions Results of structural equation modeling indicated that resilience decreased rumination and directly decreased violent behavior toward the self and others. Moreover, rumination had a strong effect on violent behavior mediated by anger. It is suggested that increasing resilience and suppressing rumination that reinforces anger would effectively prevent violent behavior toward the self and others.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.11236/jph.67.1_33 | DOI Listing |
J Hosp Med
January 2025
University of Missouri - Kansas City School of Medicine, Kansas City, Missouri, USA.
An improved understanding of patient-related violent events toward healthcare workers (HCWs) is a critical step in mitigating patient violence in the pediatric medical hospital setting. Therefore, we sought to describe the timing/setting, potential antecedents to, and management of pediatric patient-related violence toward HCW. Using our electronic health record (EHR), we performed a retrospective study of patient-related physical violent events from 2017 to 2022 among youth hospitalized at our free-standing children's hospital.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlcohol Res
January 2025
Center for Opioid Epidemiology and Policy, Division of Epidemiology, Department of Population Health, New York University Grossman School of Medicine, New York, New York.
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.
Campbell Syst Rev
March 2025
School of International Relations, Handa Centre for the Study of Terrorism and Political Violence (CSTPV) University of St Andrews St Andrews Fife Scotland.
This is the protocol for a Campbell systematic review. The objectives are as follows. (1) Examine whether secondary and tertiary interventions delivered outside of the criminal justice system are effective at countering the cognitive and behavioural radicalisation of children and adolescents by synthesising evidence relating to relevant primary and secondary outcomes of effectiveness.
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