Gun access, ownership, gun-related experiences, and substance use in young adults: a latent class analysis

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Abstract

Background: Substance use is found to associate with gun violence. However, mixed findings have been reported for gun access/ownership. To date, studies have examined gun access/ownership and gun-related experiences (e.g., carrying) separately despite the fact that gun-related experiences often occur among gun owners. Objectives: This study identifies groups of young adults based on their gun access/ownership and gun-related experiences (i.e., gun carrying, threatened someone with a gun, been threatened with a gun) and assesses whether these groups differ on their use of alcohol, cigarettes, e-cigarettes, marijuana, hard drugs, and nonmedical use of prescription medication. Methods: This study uses cross-sectional data from Wave 8 of the study Dating it Safe. Participants were 663 young adults (Mean age = 22 years; 62% female). Latent class analysis (LCA) was performed. Results: LCA identified three classes: (1) Minimal Gun Access/Experience (65.0%), (2) Gun Access without Experience (33.4%), (3) Gun Access with Experience (1.6%). Individuals in the Gun Access with Experience class reported more frequent few past month alcohol (17 days vs. 7 and 8 days, p

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Lu, Y., & Temple, J. R. (2020). Gun access, ownership, gun-related experiences, and substance use in young adults: a latent class analysis. American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse, 46(3), 333–339. https://doi.org/10.1080/00952990.2019.1700266

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