PT - JOURNAL ARTICLE AU - Carter, Patrick AU - Goldstick, Jason AU - Heinze, Justin AU - Walton, Maureen AU - Zimmerman, Marc AU - Roche, Jessica AU - Wallace, Kaneesha TI - 105 Rates of violence and substance use among a high-risk sample during the flint water crisis (fwc): results from the flint youth injury study AID - 10.1136/injuryprev-2017-042560.105 DP - 2017 Sep 01 TA - Injury Prevention PG - A39--A40 VI - 23 IP - Suppl 1 4099 - http://injuryprevention.bmj.com/content/23/Suppl_1/A39.2.short 4100 - http://injuryprevention.bmj.com/content/23/Suppl_1/A39.2.full SO - Inj Prev2017 Sep 01; 23 AB - Statement-of-purpose On April 25, 2014, Flint’s water source was changed without adding essential anti-corrosive agents, leading to lead contamination of the potable water supply. Individual-level consequences resulting from this community-wide traumatic event have yet to be examined. We examined rates of violence and substance use following the initial date of the Flint Water Crisis (FWC) exposure among youth already enrolled in an on-going longitudinal study.Methods Drug-using youth (age: 14–24) seeking assault-injury treatment and a comparison cohort of youth seeking ED care for other reasons were enrolled in a longitudinal study (Baseline: 09/2009–12/2011; Follow-ups: 6, 12, 18, 24 months). Eligible youth were re-contacted and enrolled in a 2nd wave study (Baseline: 03/2014–01/2016) with two additional biannual follow-ups. For this analysis, we conducted pre/post analyses of paired data for participants completing follow-ups within the 24 months preceding/following the initial date of exposure and examined differences in rates of substance use and violence.Results 352-youth enrolled in both studies; 313 (88.9%) had follow-up data within 24 months pre- and post-initial exposure date. In the analytic sample, baseline age was 20.1 (SD:2.4), 49.8% were male, 75.4% required public assistance, and 59.4% were assault-injured. Despite overall decreasing trends in violence and substance use among this cohort at-large, we found that the prevalence of violence (37.7%-vs.-49.5%,p<0.001) increased in the post-period, including rates of victimisation (31.9%-vs.-45.4%,p<0.001) and aggression (30.0%-vs-39.9%,p<0.001), and rates of non-partner (24.6%-vs.-32.3%,p<0.05) and partner (28.1%-vs.-40.9%,p<0.001) violence. Pre-post differences in alcohol (AUDIT-C:M=1.3,SD=2.9,p<0.001) and marijuana (ASSIST: M=1.2,SD=8.8,p<0.05) were also both positive.Conclusion/Significance While causal attributions are limited, we observed increases in violence and substance use among this high-risk sample after the initial FWC exposure, suggesting that negative health effects associated with this on-going crisis extend beyond the environmental exposure to lead and highlights the need for additional resources and research focused on addressing the consequences of this wide-scale community trauma.