Violence is among the most serious threats to the health and safety of young people between the ages of 10 and 24 in the United States. The purpose of this cross-sectional quantitative study using secondary data from the CDC\u27s 2015 National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NHAMCS) data set was to examine the characteristics (age, sex, race and ethnicity, insurance or payer source, and housing status) of young people between the ages of 10 and 24 who seek medical care for assault-related injuries through the emergency department (ED). The social ecological model was used to examine the complex interplay between individual, relationship, community, and societal factors, which allows for a better understanding of the range of factor...
CC999999/Intramural CDC HHS/United States2018-11-21T00:00:00Z29164246PMC5753998vault:2577
The medical literature has focused on violent victimization as a public health concern, examining it...
BackgroundViolent injury is the leading cause of death among urban youth. Emergency department (ED) ...
Youth assault-injury is 1 of the 5 leading causes of adolescents\u27 death in the United States. Des...
Introduction: To assess the prevalence of risk factors for violent injury among young adults treated...
In 2015, persons aged 10-24 years who were treated for nonfatal assault injuries in emergency depart...
Objectives: Adolescents with a history of peer assault are known to report high rates of other ris...
Objectives: Adolescents with a history of peer assault are known to report high rates of other risky...
Introduction: Homicide is the second leading cause of death among youth aged 15–24. Prior crosssecti...
Objective: To correlate injury patterns with patient demographics in child and adolescent assault vi...
ObjectivesViolence is one of the leading causes of death among youth ages 14 to 24. Hospitalâ and ...
BACKGROUND: This study aimed to assess the risk factors and predictors of violence among patients ad...
Background Youth are tragically affected by violence. Justice-involved youth are at elevated risk fo...
The 2009 Academic Emergency Medicine Consensus Conference working group session participants devel...
BackgroundViolent injury is the leading cause of death among urban youth. Emergency department (ED) ...
CC999999/Intramural CDC HHS/United States2018-11-21T00:00:00Z29164246PMC5753998vault:2577
The medical literature has focused on violent victimization as a public health concern, examining it...
BackgroundViolent injury is the leading cause of death among urban youth. Emergency department (ED) ...
Youth assault-injury is 1 of the 5 leading causes of adolescents\u27 death in the United States. Des...
Introduction: To assess the prevalence of risk factors for violent injury among young adults treated...
In 2015, persons aged 10-24 years who were treated for nonfatal assault injuries in emergency depart...
Objectives: Adolescents with a history of peer assault are known to report high rates of other ris...
Objectives: Adolescents with a history of peer assault are known to report high rates of other risky...
Introduction: Homicide is the second leading cause of death among youth aged 15–24. Prior crosssecti...
Objective: To correlate injury patterns with patient demographics in child and adolescent assault vi...
ObjectivesViolence is one of the leading causes of death among youth ages 14 to 24. Hospitalâ and ...
BACKGROUND: This study aimed to assess the risk factors and predictors of violence among patients ad...
Background Youth are tragically affected by violence. Justice-involved youth are at elevated risk fo...
The 2009 Academic Emergency Medicine Consensus Conference working group session participants devel...
BackgroundViolent injury is the leading cause of death among urban youth. Emergency department (ED) ...
CC999999/Intramural CDC HHS/United States2018-11-21T00:00:00Z29164246PMC5753998vault:2577
The medical literature has focused on violent victimization as a public health concern, examining it...
BackgroundViolent injury is the leading cause of death among urban youth. Emergency department (ED) ...