The Mercury News

Repeat exposures to mass shootings traumatize youth

- By Sonali Rajan, Charles Branas and Mark S. Kaplan

Yet again this week we are grappling with the news of another mass shooting on school grounds, this time at Michigan State University. The Feb. 13 shooting took place on the eve of the fifth anniversar­y of the attack that killed 17 students and staffers at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., and nine months after the mass shooting at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, that killed 21 children and teachers. Some students who were present at the MSU shooting are also survivors of another Michigan school shooting almost 15 months ago at Oxford High School.

What happens when children are repeatedly exposed to this kind of violence, grief and trauma over the course of their lives?

The data are clear: U.S. school shootings have increased over the last few years. An estimated 338,000 children have been exposed to gun violence in K-12 schools alone since 1999. And gun violence on college campuses persists. It is currently the leading cause of death among children and teens in the United States. There is now a generation of young adults whose childhoods have been directly shaped by exposure to gun violence in and outside of their schools.

Exposure to gun violence at any point during childhood is an adverse childhood experience, and extensive research on exposure to these experience­s shows links to dozens of negative outcomes in a person's life. These can include poor mental health, increased risk for chronic disease, addiction, suicide, decreased school success and even premature death. An estimated 30% of children report experienci­ng at least one adverse childhood experience. The more traumas a child experience­s, the greater their risk of poor physical and mental health outcomes.

For young people, exposure to adverse childhood experience­s such as gun violence is more likely to result in these long-term serious health challenges if there are limited protective factors in place and if there is no meaningful early interventi­on or support provided in the aftermath of the trauma.

Given how slow it is to implement meaningful gun reform laws and with the frequency of gun violence, we need to ensure we are doing all we can to support affected communitie­s — especially young people. Examples include access to schoolwide services that specifical­ly address post-traumatic stress disorder in the aftermath of a shooting and increased access to primary care, family therapy, grief support and schoolbase­d programmin­g that centers trauma-informed practices and care for students and their communitie­s.

Unfortunat­ely, sufficient and ready access to these kinds of support services continues to be hard to come by. Here too, we see politics overriding policy. Many politician­s are often quick to blame mental illness for this kind of violence, but many of these same legislator­s recently voted against a federal mental health bill and a school safety act that would have provided a significan­t funding increase for mental health programs. At a time when we lack the most basic services for students, as observed in the current shortage of school psychologi­sts and other mental health profession­als, this kind of support is crucial.

As a nation, we are not preventing these shootings and are not equipped with the resources or infrastruc­ture to effectivel­y support communitie­s in either the short- or longterm aftermath of these violent acts. The good news is that those solutions exist. We now need to start carrying them out.

Sonali Rajan is an associate professor at Teachers College, Columbia University. Charles Branas is a professor and chair of the Department of Epidemiolo­gy at the Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University. Mark S. Kaplan is a professor of social welfare at the UCLA Luskin School of Public Affairs. © 2023 Los Angeles Times. Distribute­d by Tribune Content Agency.

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