Examining adverse childhood experiences and Black youth's engagement in a hospital‐based violence intervention program using administrative data

Author:

Voith Laura A.12ORCID,Salas Atwell Meghan3,D'Alessio Alena Sorensen4,Evans Kylie E.5,Korsch‐Williams Amy12

Affiliation:

1. Jack, Joseph and Morton Mandel School of Applied Social Sciences Case Western Reserve University Cleveland Ohio USA

2. Center on Trauma and Adversity Cleveland Ohio USA

3. National Association for the Education of Young Children Washington DC USA

4. Gillings School of Global Public Health The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Chapel Hill North Carolina USA

5. Ursuline College Pepper Pike Ohio USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundStemming from poverty and systemic racism, Black youth are disproportionately represented in hospital‐based violence intervention programs (HVIPs) due to greater violence exposure. HVIPs are a critical intervention that have been shown to reduce rates of reinjury in urban hospitals and trauma centers across the United States; however, they are plagued by low enrollment and engagement rates. Few studies have examined factors related to engagement, particularly among Black youth.MethodsGuided by Trauma Theory and Critical Race Theory, this study uses a retrospective cohort design. Between‐group differences of adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) among engaged youth compared to nonengaged youth who were violently injured and recruited for a HVIP were examined using chi‐square and logistic regression. ACEs were approximated using a novel approach with administrative data.ResultsResults indicated that the total ACE score was not significantly associated with engagement status. Individual ACEs were tested across age groups.ConclusionsThis study highlights a novel approach to understanding ACEs among a hard‐to‐reach population and illuminates the significant level of ACEs faced by violence‐exposed Black youth at young ages. Considering theory, Black families may be more reluctant to engage due to fear and past harms in social service systems stemming from systemic racism. Though ACEs did not predict engagement in this study, considering the high rates of ACEs experienced by Black youth and their families in the context of systemic racism suggests that HVIPs should acknowledge historical harms and foster trauma‐informed and healing‐centered interactions during recruitment and later stages of engagement.

Funder

Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development

Publisher

Wiley

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