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Journal Article

Citation

Murphy DA, Shetty V, Herbeck DM, Der-Martirosian C, Urata M, Yamashita DD. Psychol. Health Med. 2010; 15(5): 574-583.

Affiliation

Health Risk Reduction Projects, Integrated Substance Abuse Programs, Department of Psychiatry, University of California, Los Angeles, CA, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2010, Informa - Taylor and Francis Group)

DOI

10.1080/13548506.2010.507770

PMID

20835967

PMCID

PMC3195415

Abstract

Ethnic minority youth living in urban areas experience disproportionately high rates of violent intentional injuries. This study investigates the association of violent intentional injuries with psychological distress and alcohol use among adolescents treated in trauma centers for facial injuries. Interviews were conducted with 67 adolescents treated at two urban trauma centers (predominantly males [86%], and minority [Latino, 72%; African American, 19%]). Adolescents reported experiencing several different types of accidental and assault-related injuries that required medical attention in the past six months. About half (53%) reported experiencing only unintentional injuries (e.g. car accidents, falls, sports injury); 23% experienced one type of intentional injury resulting from either fighting or being attacked; and 24% experienced two types of intentional injuries resulting from both fighting and being attacked. Measures of alcohol use and psychological distress were examined in relation to these three types of injuries. Overall, 30% of study participants reported they had been drinking alcohol at the time of injury. Compared to adolescents without intentional injuries, those who experienced a physical fight and/or attack had higher levels of alcohol problems, depression, paranoia and somatic symptoms, and were more likely to have family members with alcohol problems. There is a considerable need for adolescents with intentional assault-related injuries to be screened for alcohol and mental health problems, and to be referred for appropriate treatment interventions if they score at problem levels.


Language: en

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