We are so excited to share our micro project, “Examining the link between gun storage practices and attitudes, masculine gender norms, threat sensitivity, and suicide ideation among US uniformed law enforcement officers” today at 1:45 CT! @MikeLeDuc3 Dr. Sean Mitchell NJ Gun Violence Research Center at Rutgers SPH
“unsecured firearms in the home increase the risk of death by suicide, risk for unintentional shootings, lethal domestic violence, & death due to subsequent trafficking,” Michael Anestis, NJ Gun Violence Research Center at Rutgers SPH. The Trace
Need a gun lock box? Follow Marion County Youth Violence Prevention Coalition for an announcement tomorrow!
A whole chunk of interesting publications from Rutgers Gun Violence Research Centre:
'What's missing? Violently injured Black men's narratives around Adverse Childhood Experiences' is just one of them...
NJ Gun Violence Research Center at Rutgers SPH
pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/38237241/
Register and join this FREE virtual event and hear from 20+ gun violence prevention researchers and community members as they present evidence-based, equitable policies and programs that will prevent gun violence in our communities. ow.ly/WkXE50RnrcV
Moms Demand Action Brady | United Against Gun Violence…
ARMS Director Kerri Raissian presents “Messenger Matters” at the National Research Conference for the Prevention of Firearm-Related Harms. The research, funded by NJ Gun Violence Research Center at Rutgers SPH, uses an RCT to measure how agreement with gun policy changes with messengers.
Had a great time with awesome colleagues at the Inaugural Rutgers firearm summit. y - Dr. Jaclyn Schildkraut 🟧 Ian Stanley, PhD R. Thurman Barnes, JD, MDiv NJ Gun Violence Research Center at Rutgers SPH
Assoc Director Jenn Necci Dineen presents “Gun Talk” at the National Research Conference for the Prevention of Firearm-Related Harms. The research, funded by NJ Gun Violence Research Center at Rutgers SPH, explores why drs do/do not talk to patients about secure firearm storage.
People who avoid COVID-19 precautions to prevent illness are more likely to purchase firearms – a pattern of behavior most common among moderate & conservative individuals, according to a Rutgers SPH study. NJ Gun Violence Research Center at Rutgers SPH #RutgersResearch
Learn more: go.rutgers.edu/p4ujzzvs