Policy & Change: An Analysis of Veteran Perpetrated Mass Shootings & Social Work's Call to Action

Main Article Content

Christopher Collins
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-6782-8967

Abstract

Public mass shootings are relatively rare occurrences in the United States. As such, focusing on individual-level factors to develop a prevention framework is ill-advised. However, starting with veterans, as an overrepresented group of offenders, may be an important step to determining and developing policies that work to prevent mass shootings. The Veteran’s Administration (VA) is the largest employer of social workers in the United States and employs more than 15,000 master’s level social work professionals. Policy and training changes made to the VA system have the potential to begin reducing incidents of public mass shootings. The purpose of this study was to determine whether veteran-status or the phenomenon of leakage influences the number of casualties in public mass shootings. Further, a renewed call-to-action is issued for social workers engaged with veterans, military personnel, and their families. A negative binomial regression analysis was utilized to examine 168 public mass shootings events in the United States from 1966 until 2019. While veteran status was not associated with increased casualty this does not underscore the importance of policy changes that limit access to firearms for high-risk people. Further, because leakage was statistically significant in explaining casualty rates in mass shootings additional training related to duty to warn may be necessary for social workers engaged in therapeutic relationships with veterans, military personnel, and their families. The results of the negative binomial regression offer insights into what effective policy interventions may look like to reduce mass shootings.

Article Details

How to Cite
Collins, C. (2023). Policy & Change: An Analysis of Veteran Perpetrated Mass Shootings & Social Work’s Call to Action. Journal of Forensic Social Work, 7(1), 111–122. https://doi.org/10.15763/issn.1936-9298.2023.7.1.111-123
Section
Articles

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