key: cord-1028548-m7y5ns2u authors: Martin, Rachel; Rajan, Sonali; Shareef, Faizah; Xie, Kristal; Allen, Kalice; Zimmerman, Marc; Jay, Jonathan title: Racial Disparities in Child Exposure to Firearm Violence Before and During COVID-19 date: 2022-03-15 journal: Am J Prev Med DOI: 10.1016/j.amepre.2022.02.007 sha: 4592fd9b452b08626b22a416eb160f07ee730e6d doc_id: 1028548 cord_uid: m7y5ns2u INTRODUCTION: Childhood exposure to neighborhood firearm violence adversely affects mental and physical health across the life course. Study objectives were to: (1) quantify racial disparities in these exposures across the U.S. and (2) assess changes during the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic, when firearm violence increased. METHODS: The study used counts of children aged 5–17 years, disaggregated by U.S. Census racial category, for every census tract (N=73,056). Neighborhood firearm violence was the number of fatal shootings per census tract, based on 2015–2021 Gun Violence Archive data. Quasi-Poisson regressions were used to estimate baseline disparities and COVID-19-related changes and examined differences across geographic regions. RESULTS: Pre-pandemic exposure was lowest among White children and highest among Black children, who experienced 4.44 times more neighborhood firearm violence exposure (95% CI=4.33, 4.56, p<0.001) than White children. The pandemic increased exposure by 27% in the lowest-risk group (i.e., White children; 95% CI=20%, 34%, p<0.001), but pandemic effects were even greater for children in nearly all non-White categories. Baseline violence levels and racial disparities varied considerably by region, with the highest levels in the South and the largest-magnitude disparities observed in the Northeast and Midwest. CONCLUSIONS: Large-scale racial disparities exist in child exposure to neighborhood firearm violence, and these disparities grew during the pandemic. Equitable access to trauma-informed programs, community-based prevention, and structural reforms are urgently needed. Firearm violence persists in the U.S. as a public health crisis. Tragically, firearm injury is now the leading cause of death among children and teens. 1 The epidemic of firearm violence affects children through multiple pathways. These pathways include direct exposure (i.e., being killed, injured, or threatened with a firearm) and indirect exposure (e.g., witnessing firearm violence, hearing gunshots, living in a community where violence is common, losing a friend or family member to firearm injury). 2 Each type of firearm violence exposure can contribute to adverse child outcomes. Children exposed to firearm violence, whether directly or indirectly, may experience adverse short-term and long-term psychological effects, 3 including post-traumatic stress disorder. 2 These effects of trauma carry over into student learning outcomes, physical health, and emotional well-being. 4 Children exposed to firearm violence in their neighborhood experience greater difficulty with concentration, overall reduced performance in school, 5 and spend less time playing and being physically active owing to neighborhood safety concerns. 6 Additionally, exposure to community violence can manifest as collective feelings of hopelessness, disorganized social networks, and altered social norms that can promote further violence. 7 Rates of childhood firearm violence exposure vary by exposure type and across racial groups. More than 17,000 children are shot every year. 2 Forty-one percent of children in a nationally representative sample reported having recently seen or heard firearm violence occur, and 8% had a friend or family member who died by firearm homicide. 8 These exposures disproportionately burden children of color, especially Black children. 9 ,10 A study of fifth graders in 3 U.S. cities found that the rate of witnessing a threat of injury with a firearm in the past year was 20% for Black youth, 11% for Latinx youth, and 5% for White youth. 11 These racial disparities in exposure further reinforce disparities in other adverse child outcomes. 7, 9 Understanding racial disparities in childhood exposure to neighborhood firearm violence-and thus, children's opportunities for healthy development-is critical to informed policy responses, particularly amid the coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic. Firearm violence has spiked since the start of the pandemic. [12] [13] [14] [15] However, few researchers have documented the effect of this spike specifically on childhood violence exposures and racial disparities. 16 Moreover, the extent to which these outcomes vary across U.S. regions is poorly understood, posing a barrier to informed policymaking. The current study examines racial disparities in childhood exposure to firearm violence before and during the COVID-19 pandemic, leveraging timely, national data on firearm violence incidence to generate analyses for every census tract in the U.S. To inform programming, policymaking, and data collection, analyses estimate: (1) the magnitude of racial disparities in how many firearm homicides occurred within each child's neighborhood of residence; (2) changes in racial disparities during the COVID-19 pandemic; and (3) the extent to which these disparities varied between geographic regions. Exposure to firearm violence was measured based on the number of firearm homicide incidents that occurred in a child's census tract of residence. This outcome is referred to here as "neighborhood exposure to firearm violence." Although some exposure to violence occurs outside a child's home neighborhood, a majority occurs within the home neighborhood, 17 and home neighborhood exposures are associated with childhood outcomes. 3, 5 This "neighborhood effects" approach treats monitoring of neighborhood firearm violence as akin to monitoring the presence of other neighborhood-level determinants of health, such as air and water quality, and healthy food access, for example. From this social ecological standpoint, racial health disparities emerge from the differences in social context that U.S. society allocates inequitably according to racial status. 18 The study team obtained firearm injury data from March 2015 through March 2021 from the Gun Violence Archive (GVA), a non-profit organization that tracks shootings across the U.S. using media reports and other public sources. 19 GVA staff manually verify each record and extract basic characteristics, including the date, location, and the number of persons injured or killed. GVA data were used, rather than government sources, because there is currently no government source that provides firearm violence data at the spatial granularity required (i.e., neighborhood level) on a national scale. 20 GVA, by comparison, provides the street block location of each incident. An additional advantage of GVA data is timeliness, compared with government data sources with lags that approach 1 year. 20 For similar reasons, prior studies have used GVA data to study neighborhood effects 10, 21, 22 and COVID-19 effects 12 on firearm violence. Only GVA data on fatal shootings were used, even though GVA data contain both fatal and nonfatal shootings. GVA captures fatal shootings with good accuracy: 83% of fatal shootings from 3 cities were accurately represented in GVA data on date, location, and victim age and gender 23 ; in 2018, GVA underreported fatal shootings by just 2%, compared with government counts. 13 By contrast, GVA only matched 43% of nonfatal shooting incidents in the 3-city study, and no government source exists for nonfatal shootings, leaving important questions about GVA accuracy for nonfatal shootings. Population data were obtained from the 2015-2019 American Community Survey of the U.S. Census, specifically the estimated count of children aged 5-17 years for 8 racial categories: Black, American Indian and Alaska Native (hereafter "Native American"), Asian, Native Hawaiian/Pacific Islander, Hispanic, White, ≥2 races, and "Some Other Race," a category assigned when a respondent manually enters a different category. These categories were mutually exclusive, meaning that any individual identified as Hispanic ethnicity was counted as Hispanic. Asian and Native Hawaiian and Other Pacific Islander categories were combined as "Asian Pacific Islander," generating 7 categories for analysis. Census data on children aged <5 years were omitted, because including this category would have added infants and very young children whose experiences of neighborhood violence would likely differ from those of older children. Sensitivity analyses including this age group produced similar results. The research team geocoded each incident using the GVA-supplied location (e.g., "1000 Block of Main St., Boston, MA") and matched locations to the full set of U.S. census tracts (N=73,056). Census tracts were used as proxies for neighborhoods to measure children's exposure to neighborhood firearm homicide, consistent with previous studies of neighborhood effects on firearm violence, 21 shown that daily activity patterns changed starkly in mid-March 2020. 26 This pandemic year approach enabled comparisons of the first 12 months of the COVID-19 pandemic to earlier time periods, without separate adjustments for seasonal trends in firearm violence. There were 6 time periods (pandemic years 2015-2020), including the first year of COVID-19 in the U.S. The analytical data set was constructed to include 1 row per year, tract, and racial group. To describe the magnitude of exposure to neighborhood firearm violence in absolute terms, mean yearly counts of fatal shootings per census tract were calculated, weighted by the number of children from each racial category, for the pre-pandemic and pandemic periods. All subsequent analyses were focused on estimating and explaining racial disparities in neighborhood firearm violence exposure rates. Study models analyzed fatal shootings as a function of child racial composition. Quasi-Poisson regression was used because of moderate overdispersion in the firearm violence outcomes. These models were weighted by race-specific population count for each census tract, in order to estimate disparities at the U.S. population level. 27 Based on published work, the lowest exposure rates were expected among White children 4, 11 and this category was used as the reference group. Fixed effects were included for each racial category (except White, the reference group) and an interaction term with the COVID-19 pandemic year indicator, to estimate the effects of the pandemic and any changes in racial disparities associated with the pandemic. For interaction terms, this approach estimates a multiplicative effect-the interpretation of this effect is explained further in Results. Standard errors were clustered by pandemic year and census tract to address possible intraclass correlation across each unit of analysis. 28 In subsequent models, the main model was stratified by geographic region, to determine whether the national trends were consistent across spatial contexts. Race-specific exposures and disparities by state were mapped for additional granularity. All analyses were performed in R, version 3.6.1, using the sf package for spatial analyses and the fixest package for regression models. The Boston University Medical IRB waived review as non-human subjects research, as all data were publicly available and de-identified. The population sample comprised approximately 58,350,000 children aged 5-17 years. Non-Hispanic White (hereafter, "White") children represented the single largest population group (46.9%), followed by Hispanic (22.9%) and Black (12.9%) children (Table 1 ). In an average pre-pandemic year, 9,063,000 children were exposed to ≥1 firearm fatality. In the first pandemic year, 11,121,000 children were exposed (difference=2,058,000) (Table 1) . Before the pandemic, White children experienced the lowest exposure to neighborhood firearm violence (mean=0.11 incidents/year), whereas Black children averaged the highest exposure (mean=0.50 incidents/year) ( Table 1) . Rates of exposure and between-group differences in exposure were relatively stable from 2015 to 2019 (Figure 1 ). During pandemic year 2020, mean exposure rates increased for every racial group, including Black children, whose mean exposure increased to 0.71 incidents/year (Table 1) . In the national model, every other racial category experienced greater pre-pandemic exposure than White children ( 1.16, 95% CI=1.10, 1.22, p<0.001) . The COVID-19 pandemic was associated with 1.27 times greater exposure in the reference group (i.e., White children; 95% CI=1.20, 1.34, p<0.001, Model 2) ( Table 2 ). For every racial category except 1 (Native American children), COVID-19 was associated with a larger-magnitude increase in exposure. In other words, the pandemic increased the estimated disparity between non-White and White children. The largest estimated pandemic-related increase was for Black children, for whom the estimated COVID effect was 1.12 times greater than for White children (95% CI=1.12, 1.13, p<0.001). This effect was multiplicative, meaning that Black children's exposure rates during COVID-19 were the product of the higher baseline rate observed in Model 1, multiplied by a COVID-19 effect that was 1.12 times larger than the COVID-19 effect applied to White children (i.e., approximately 1.42 times Black children's baseline rates). These national trends contained substantial regional variation. The South displayed the highest overall rates of exposure, but the Northeast and Midwest displayed the largest racial disparities (Figure 2 ). Virtually every non-White group exhibited pre-pandemic disparities in every region, but wide variation was observed: For (Figure 3 ). Children of all non-White racial groups experienced higher levels of exposure to neighborhood firearm violence than White children, and these disparities grew during the COVID-19 pandemic. Black children experienced the highest pre-pandemic levels of exposure and the largest increase in exposure to firearm violence during the pandemic. The analysis also identified important differences between regions. These findings are consistent with prior work showing that children of color experience higher rates of violence exposure than White children. 9, 11 The current study is the first to estimate racial disparities in child firearm violence exposure using data from every U.S. neighborhood, and one of the few studies to document the sharp increase in firearm violence during the COVID-19 pandemic. 14, 29 The analysis quantifies disparities affecting children under-represented in prior studies, including Asian Pacific Islander, Native American, and Multiracial children. The finding of large disparities affecting children identified as "Some Other Race" by the U.S. Census highlights the social marginalization of these individuals and the need for data collection that properly disambiguates among the racial identities that tend to occupy this category, including Arab and other Middle Eastern and North African identities, as well as Hispanic subgroups who identify with specific countries of ancestry. 30 Even aggregation by Asian race may mask disparities affecting children within subgroups (e.g., those of Hmong, Filipino, and Vietnamese descent 31 ) and across geographies-these should be disaggregated in future work. A sizeable increase in firearm violence exposure during the pandemic has the potential to reverberate across health and educational outcomes over the life course. Researchers studying the health disparities that arise from natural disasters have noted that long-term access to integrated social services is key. 32 Schools have been the most common sites for identification of children affected by violence and-with sufficient resources and support-can provide opportunities for establishing sustainable interventions. 33 Access to evidence-based after school programming also shows promise. 34 Other approaches include psychological first aid, a strategy used in the immediate aftermath of a traumatic event to mitigate the impact of exposure to gun violence through healthy coping mechanisms and increased resiliency. 35 Moreover, racially disparate exposure to firearm violence requires structural solutions focused on preventing violence. Person-focused strategies include community violence intervention, an approach in which credible messengers mediate disputes and connect individuals with social services. 36 Place-based strategies, such as greening vacant lots 37 and demolishing abandoned buildings, 38, 39 can address the effects of physical deterioration and disinvestment that have disproportionately affected communities of color. Little prior work 40 has documented the considerable variation in racial disparities in childhood violence exposure found across U.S. regions. Although overall rates of neighborhood firearm violence exposure are highest in the South, racial disparities are substantially larger in the Northeast and Midwest. Residential racial segregation is one possible explanation. Institutional discrimination against Black Americans moving from the South during the 20th Century contributed to high levels of segregation in Midwestern and Northeastern cities, 41 including the Rust Belt, where the largest disparities were found. Distinctive exposure patterns by race and geography suggest a need for focused and culturally appropriate intervention, as well as reversing disinvestment in the most segregated contexts. Some limitations of this work should be considered when interpreting these findings. Census tract-level counts of children by race were based on U.S. Census estimates that include non-trivial margins of error. As 5-year counts were used, children moving neighborhoods or larger-scale shifts in demographics were not observed. Unlike many prior studies in this area, children's experiences of violence (e.g., hearing gunshots or witnessing assaults) were not measured. Instead, the incidence of firearm homicide in a child's home neighborhood was measured. This measure is potentially overinclusive of direct experiences, as it includes events that a given child might be unaware of, and underinclusive, as it omits experiences of violence that occur outside the home neighborhood. This methodological choice limits the ability to draw conclusions about the mental and physical health implications of the measured exposures. This limitation points toward the importance of large-scale surveillance of these experiences using surveys and other methods. However, direct measures are not necessary to anticipate serious adverse consequences from neighborhood violence exposure. Children are often highly sensitive to neighborhood safety threats, even at young ages, 6, 42 and researchers have found adverse effects on children based only on information about where violence occurred, without directly observing whether children were aware of it. 5, 43 Moreover, firearm violence can affect children's lives without their directly experiencing it: For example, caregivers may curtail children's time outside the home to protect them from threats perceived by adults. 42 Firearm violence also hinders economic development, and is often met with aggressive policing, 24 with important implications for the social and physical environment where children develop. Finally, GVA is not a government data source, and prior work has identified gaps in the incidents that appear in GVA. 23 For this reason, GVA data on nonfatal shootings, the type that displayed large gaps, were omitted. As a consequence, this study only measured a subset of exposures to firearm violence. In prior work, fatal shootings matched government records at higher rates (83%) 23 and closely aligned with aggregated government data. 13 It is unknown whether GVA data on fatal shootings display systematic bias (e.g., by victim's race), but if they did, the current study would likely underestimate disparities. Moreover, though the current study's results align with estimates from other sources that homicides increased by approximately 30% during the COVID-19 pandemic, 44 it is possible that GVA data collection procedures have improved over time, in which case using these data to assess longitudinal trends could overestimate the COVID-19related increase in firearm injuries. Improving access to government data on firearm injuries is critically important for future work. 45 CONCLUSIONS Nationally, children of color, especially Black children, experience greater exposure to neighborhood firearm violence than White children. 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This work has been supported by