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Depression, suicide risk, and declining to answer firearm‐related survey items among military personnel and veterans
Author(s) -
Bryan Craig J.,
Bryan AnnaBelle O.,
May Alexis M.,
Harris Julia A.,
Baker Justin C.
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
suicide and life‐threatening behavior
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.544
H-Index - 90
eISSN - 1943-278X
pISSN - 0363-0234
DOI - 10.1111/sltb.12694
Subject(s) - suicide prevention , military personnel , poison control , medicine , logistic regression , injury prevention , occupational safety and health , depression (economics) , demography , harm , human factors and ergonomics , multinomial logistic regression , gerontology , psychology , psychiatry , medical emergency , social psychology , macroeconomics , pathology , machine learning , sociology , political science , computer science , law , economics
Abstract Objectives To describe the characteristics of military personnel and veterans who decline to answer survey items asking about firearm availability at home, and to determine how these characteristics compare to those of military personnel and veterans who answered these items. Methods Self‐report surveys were administered to 2025 military personnel and veterans visiting a primary care clinic located at five military installations across the United States for a routine visit. Multinomial logistic regression was used to identify factors that distinguished participants with firearms at home, participants without firearms at home, and participants who declined answering. Results In univariate analyses, participants who selected “refuse to answer” in response to an item asking about firearm access at home did not differ demographically from participants who selected “yes,” but were significantly more likely to screen positive for depression and recent thoughts of death or self‐harm. These differences were not statistically significant in multivariate analyses, however. Participants who selected “refuse to answer” or “yes” were significantly more likely than participants who selected “no” to be male, white, and previously deployed. Conclusions Military personnel and veterans who decline answering firearm‐related survey items are indistinguishable from those who report having a firearm at home. Declining to answer firearm‐related items is more common among those who screen positive for depression or recent thoughts of death or self‐harm, but this association is statistically accounted for by demographic factors (i.e., male gender, white race).