Abstract
We utilized a socio-ecological model to explore views from 85 young people and 10 local stakeholders on forms and underlying factors for unintentional injury, violence, self-harm, and suicidal behavior of adolescents in Kilifi County, Kenya. Young people took part in 11 focus group discussions, whereas 10 in-depth interviews were conducted with the local stakeholders. Road traffic accidents, falls, fights, sexual and gender-based violence, theft, and vandalism were viewed as common. There was an overlap of risk factors, especially at intra- and interpersonal levels (gender, poverty, substance use, parenting behavior, school drop-out). Some broader-level risk factors were insecure neighborhoods and risky sources of livelihood. Research is needed to quantify burden and to pilot feasible injury prevention interventions in this setting.
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Ssewanyana, D., van Baar, A., Mwangala, P. N., Newton, C. R., & Abubakar, A. (2019). Inter-relatedness of underlying factors for injury and violence among adolescents in rural coastal Kenya: A qualitative study. Health Psychology Open, 6(1). https://doi.org/10.1177/2055102919849399
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