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Journal Article

Citation

Meza JI, Bondoc C, Keshav N, Bosco J, Barnert E. Child Youth Care Forum 2023; 52(3): 533-558.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2023, Holtzbrinck Springer Nature Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1007/s10566-022-09696-8

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

African-American and Latinx youth are disproportionately exposed to neighborhood violence and are overrepresented in the U.S. juvenile justice system. Perceived neighborhood violence is associated with negative health outcomes.

Objective

We examined associations between African-American and Latinx youths' perceived neighborhood violence and health during reentry after juvenile incarceration.

Methods

Youth (nā€‰=ā€‰50) returning home after incarceration completed health questionnaires at one-month post-incarceration. A subset of participants (nā€‰=ā€‰25 youth) also participated in one-on-one, semi-structured longitudinal interviews.

Results

Twenty-eight (56%) participants reported neighborhood violence in quantitative surveys. Quantitative analyses revealed that perceived neighborhood violence was positively associated with reported asthma diagnosis, doctor recommendations for medical follow-up, perceived stress, and adverse childhood experiences (ACEs). Perceived neighborhood violence was negatively correlated with perceived family support. Stress ratings were associated with ACE total scores, moderate to severe depression symptoms, and family support. Moderate-to-severe depression symptoms were significantly correlated with lower ratings of family support. Qualitative interviews supplemented our quantitative findings and showed that responses to perceived neighborhood violence were linked to specific health-related behaviors, such as substance use or avoidance of gang activity.

Conclusions

Overall, our quantitative and qualitative results indicate that perceived neighborhood violence is associated with many negative psychosocial factors that could impact overall health and wellbeing of youth undergoing reentry. Treatment implications include the development and testing of family-centered interventions that help improve the transition back into the community for youth undergoing reentry and especially, their access to evidence-based treatment, including leveraging family telehealth substance use interventions.

Keywords: Juvenile Justice


Language: en

Keywords

Health; Juvenile justice; Neighborhood violence; Reentry; Youth incarceration

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