| Literature DB >> 29797151 |
Jeffrey Swanson1,2, Michele Easter3, Mira Brancu3,4, John A Fairbank3,4.
Abstract
This article examines the public safety rationale for a federal policy of prohibiting gun sales to veterans with psychiatric disabilities who are assigned a fiduciary to manage their benefits from the Department of Veterans Affairs. The policy was evaluated using data on 3200 post-deployment veterans from the Iraq and Afghanistan war era. Three proxy measures of fiduciary need-based on intellectual disability, drug abuse, or acute psychopathology-were associated in bivariate analysis with interpersonal violence and suicidality. In multivariate analysis, statistical significance remained only for the measure based on acute psychopathology. Implications for reforms to the fiduciary firearm restriction policy are discussed.Entities:
Keywords: Fiduciary; Gun violence; Mental Illness; Suicide; Veterans
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29797151 DOI: 10.1007/s10488-018-0881-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Adm Policy Ment Health ISSN: 0894-587X