Gun Carrying and Drug Selling Among Young Incarcerated Men and Women

被引:0
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作者
Deborah Kacanek
David Hemenway
机构
[1] Tufts-New England Medical Center,Division of Geographic Medicine and Infectious Disease
[2] Tufts University School of Medicine,Department of Public Health and Family Medicine
来源
Journal of Urban Health | 2006年 / 83卷
关键词
Crack cocaine; Drug use; Drug selling; Gun carrying; Prison; Victimization; Violence; Weapon carrying; Young adults;
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学科分类号
摘要
This paper examines the relationship between illegal drug economy involvement, gun-related victimization, and recent gun carrying among young men and women incarcerated in a state prison in the United States. Interviews were conducted with 18- to 25-year old incarcerated men (n = 135) and women (n = 69) between July 1999 and October 2000. Forty-five percent of men and 16% of women reported carrying a gun in the year prior to incarceration. Respondents who sold crack cocaine or other drugs were more likely to have carried guns than those not selling drugs. However, hard drug use was not associated with gun carrying among men. All ten women who carried guns had used hard drugs. Sixty-seven percent of men and 28% of women had been shot at. Respondents who sold crack cocaine were at elevated risk of being shot at. Among men, selling crack (OR = 10.2, 95% CI = 2.5, 42.1) and ever being shot at (OR = 4.6, 95% CI = 1.7, 12.2), were associated with carrying guns. These findings provide further evidence of a link between crack selling (but not necessarily drug using) and gun carrying.
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