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Citation

Santaularia, N. Jeanie; Osypuk, Theresa L.; Ramirez, Marizen R.; & Mason, Susan M. (2022). Violence in the Great Recession. American Journal of Epidemiology, 191(11), 1847-1855. PMCID: PMC10144667

Abstract

Substantial evidence suggests that economic hardship causes violence. However, a large majority of this research relies on observational studies that use traditional violence surveillance systems that suffer from selection bias and over-represent vulnerable populations, such as people of color. To overcome limitations of prior work, we employed a quasi-experimental design to assess the impact of the Great Recession on explicit violence diagnoses (injuries identified to be caused by a violent event) and proxy violence diagnoses (injuries highly correlated with violence) for child maltreatment, intimate partner violence, elder abuse, and their combination. We used Minnesota hospital data (2004-2014), conducting a difference-in-differences analysis at the county level (n = 86) using linear regression to compare changes in violence rates from before the recession (2004-2007) to after the recession (2008-2014) in counties most affected by the recession, versus changes over the same time period in counties less affected by the recession. The findings suggested that the Great Recession had little or no impact on explicitly identified violence; however, it affected proxy-identified violence. Counties that were more highly affected by the Great Recession saw a greater increase in the average rate of proxy-identified child abuse, elder abuse, intimate partner violence, and combined violence when compared with less-affected counties.

URL

http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/aje/kwac114

Reference Type

Journal Article

Year Published

2022

Journal Title

American Journal of Epidemiology

Author(s)

Santaularia, N. Jeanie
Osypuk, Theresa L.
Ramirez, Marizen R.
Mason, Susan M.

Article Type

Regular

PMCID

PMC10144667

Continent/Country

United States of America

State

Minnesota