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      • Community violence can cause significant physical injuries, including death, of community members. Living in a community experiencing violence is also associated with increased risk of developing chronic diseases.
      www.cdc.gov/community-violence/about/index.html
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  2. Oct 7, 2019 · Violence in its many forms can affect the health of people who are the targets, those who are the perpetrators, and the communities in which both live.

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      a public health problem. Violence can affect people at every...

  3. Aug 15, 2021 · This research is pioneer because it analyzes for the first time the consequences of IGV on gender violence survivors’ health and well-being. However, the results regarding health and well-being outcomes of sexual harassment and abuse are consistent with other studies.

    • Adriana Aubert, Ramon Flecha
    • 2021
  4. Nov 7, 2023 · Community violence is a persistent and challenging public health problem. Community violence not only physically affects individuals, but also its effects reverberate to the well-being of families and entire communities.

    • 10.2196/50444
    • 2023
    • JMIR Res Protoc. 2023; 12: e50444.
  5. Addressing exposure to crime and violence as a public health issue may help prevent and reduce the harms to individual and community health and well-being. Public health strategies to address crime and violence focus on building resilience and reducing susceptibility, building healthy gender norms, developing healthy relationships, and creating ...

  6. Apr 9, 2022 · This review confirms the positive relationship between community violence and internalizing mental health symptoms in adolescents and provides relevant information that can direct public efforts to build policies in the prevention of both problems.

  7. Jan 1, 2022 · We use data on household-level perceptions of neighborhood violence as well as reported crimes and local media reports to measure violence. First, we find the poor live in neighborhoods that they perceive to have higher levels of violence and have objectively more violence.

  8. KEY FINDINGS. Four neighborhood factors—social cohesion, social control, spatial mismatch, and environ-mental hazards—have the strongest effect on personal outcomes. There is a direct line from exposure to neigh-borhood violence and pollution to poorer health.

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