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  Vol. 159 No. 3, March 2005 TABLE OF CONTENTS
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Violence Perpetration Among Urban American Indian Youth

Can Protection Offset Risk?

Linda H. Bearinger, MS, PhD; Sandra Pettingell, PhD; Michael D. Resnick, PhD; Carol L. Skay, PhD; Sandra J. Potthoff, PhD; John Eichhorn, BA

Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 2005;159:270-277.

Objective  To predict the likelihood of violence perpetration given various combinations of the most statistically salient risk and protective factors related to violence perpetration.

Design  Urban Indian Youth Health Survey, conducted from October 9, 1995, to March 30, 1998, consisting of 200 forced-choice items exploring values, cultural identity, relationships, decision-making skills, and health and well-being.

Setting  Urban schools and an after-school youth development program at an urban American Indian center.

Participants  Five hundred sixty-nine urban American Indian youth enrolled in grades 3 through 12.

Main Outcome Measures  Violence perpetration dichotomized in 2 ways: (1) level of violence perpetration (ie, hitting someone 1-2 times in the past year vs picking fights, hitting repeatedly, participating in group fights, or shooting or stabbing someone in the past year) and (2) having shot and/or stabbed someone during the past year.

Results  In the final multivariate models with age as a covariate, most protective against violence perpetration were connections to school (odds ratio [OR], 0.17), positive affect (OR, 0.29), and peer prosocial behavior norms against violence (OR, 0.35). School connectedness (OR, 0.01) and positive affect (OR, 0.46) were also protective against shooting and/or stabbing someone, as was parental prosocial behavior norms against violence (OR, 0.23). The strongest risk factors for violence perpetration were substance use (OR, 2.60) and suicidal thoughts/behaviors (OR, 2.71); for shooting and/or stabbing, it was substance use (OR, 5.26). The likelihood of violence perpetration increased markedly (from 10% to 85%) as the exposure to risk factors increased and protective factors decreased. For shooting or stabbing someone, the probabilities ranged from 3% (0 risks and 3 protective factors) to 64% (1 risk and 0 protective factors).

Conclusion  The dramatic reduction in the likelihood of violence involvement when risk was offset with protective factors in the probability profiles suggests the utility of a dual strategy of reducing risk while boosting protection.


Author Affiliations: Center for Adolescent Nursing, School of Nursing (Drs Bearinger, Pettingell, and Skay and Mr Eichhorn), Department of Pediatrics, Medical School (Drs Bearinger and Resnick), and Carlson School of Management (Dr Potthoff), University of Minnesota, Minneapolis.



THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES

Moderator Factors in First Nation Students at Risk for Psychosocial Problems
Mykota and Schwean
Canadian Journal of School Psychology 2006;21:4-17.
ABSTRACT  





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