Paul H. O'Neill School of Public and Environmental Affairs, Indiana University Indianapolis.
Department of Surgery, Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis.
JAMA Netw Open. 2023 Oct 2;6(10):e2340246. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.40246.
Despite the prevalence of posttraumatic stress symptoms after firearm injury, little is known about how firearm injury survivors connect with mental health services.
To determine facilitators and barriers to mental health care engagement among firearm injury survivors.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: A qualitative study of 1-on-1, semistructured interviews conducted within a community setting in Indianapolis, Indiana, between June 2021 and January 2022. Participants were recruited via community partners and snowball sampling. Participants who survived an intentional firearm injury, were shot within Indianapolis, were aged 13 years or older, and were English speaking were eligible. Participants were asked to discuss their lives after firearm injury, the emotional consequences of their injury, and their utilization patterns of mental health services. Data were analyzed from August 2022 to June 2023.
Survivors' lived experience after firearm injury, sources of emotional support, mental health utilization, and their desired engagement with mental health care after firearm injury.
A total of 18 participants (17 were Black [94%], 16 were male [89%], and 14 were aged between 13 and 24 years [77%]) who survived a firearm injury were interviewed. Survivors described family members, friends, and informal networks as their main source of emotional support. Barriers to mental health care utilization were perceived as a lack of benefit to services, distrust in practitioners, and fear of stigma. Credible messengers served as facilitators to mental health care. Survivors also described the emotional impact their shooting had on their families, particularly mothers, partners, and children.
In this study of survivors of firearm injury, findings illustrated the consequences of stigma and fear when seeking mental health care, inadequate trusted resources, and the need for awareness of and access to mental health resources for family members and communities most impacted by firearm injury. Future studies should evaluate whether community capacity building, digital health delivery, and trauma-informed public health campaigns could overcome these barriers to mitigate the emotional trauma of firearm injuries to reduce health disparities and prevent future firearm violence.
尽管创伤后应激症状在枪支伤害后很常见,但对于枪支伤害幸存者如何与心理健康服务机构建立联系知之甚少。
确定枪支伤害幸存者获得心理健康保健的促进因素和障碍。
设计、环境和参与者:这是一项在印第安纳州印第安纳波利斯市社区环境中进行的 1 对 1 半结构化访谈的定性研究,于 2021 年 6 月至 2022 年 1 月期间进行。参与者是通过社区合作伙伴和滚雪球抽样招募的。符合条件的参与者必须是枪支伤害的幸存者、在印第安纳波利斯被枪击、年龄在 13 岁或以上且会说英语。参与者被要求讨论他们在枪支伤害后的生活、伤害的情绪后果以及他们对心理健康服务的使用模式。数据于 2022 年 8 月至 2023 年 6 月进行分析。
枪支伤害幸存者的生活经历、情绪支持的来源、心理健康的使用情况以及他们在枪支伤害后对心理健康保健的期望参与度。
共有 18 名参与者(17 名黑人[94%],16 名男性[89%],14 名年龄在 13 至 24 岁之间[77%])接受了采访。幸存者将家庭成员、朋友和非正式网络描述为他们主要的情绪支持来源。利用心理健康服务的障碍被认为是缺乏服务效益、对从业者的不信任以及对耻辱感的恐惧。可信的信息传递者是获得心理健康服务的促进因素。幸存者还描述了枪击事件对他们的家庭,特别是母亲、伴侣和孩子,所产生的情绪影响。
在这项对枪支伤害幸存者的研究中,研究结果说明了在寻求心理健康服务时,耻辱感和恐惧的后果、缺乏可信赖的资源,以及为受枪支伤害影响最大的家庭成员和社区提供心理健康资源的意识和获取途径的必要性。未来的研究应评估社区能力建设、数字医疗服务和以创伤为中心的公共卫生运动是否可以克服这些障碍,以减轻枪支伤害的情绪创伤,减少健康差距并预防未来的枪支暴力。