
Charles C. Branas
VerifiedUniversity of Pennsylvania · Rehabilitation Medicine
Active 1993–2024
Research topics
- Political Science
- Medicine
- Environmental health
- Criminology
- Psychology
- Computer Science
- Medical emergency
- Nursing
- Law
- Demography
- Gerontology
- Public relations
- Psychiatry
Selected publications
State Firearm Laws, Gun Ownership, and K-12 School Shootings: Implications for School Safety
Journal of School Violence · 2022 · 31 citations
Senior authorCorresponding- Political Science
- Criminology
- Computer Science
that identified any act of intentional interpersonal gunfire in a K-12 school over the course of two decades. We also compiled new data on active school shootings during the same twenty-year time period, which identified any attempted mass shooting incident in a K-12 school. We conducted a time-series analysis to measure the association of permissiveness of state firearm laws and state gun ownership with K-12 school shootings and active shootings. More permissive firearm laws and higher rates of gun ownership were associated with higher rates of both school shootings and active school shootings after controlling for critical covariates. Specific recommendations for K-12 schools to consider as they seek to prevent acts of intentional gunfire on school grounds are presented.
JAMA Internal Medicine · 2022 · 67 citations
Senior authorCorresponding- Medicine
- Environmental health
- Gerontology
Importance: Structural racism has resulted in long-standing disinvestment and dilapidated environmental conditions in Black neighborhoods. Abandoned houses signal neglect and foster stress and fear for residents, weakening social ties and potentially contributing to poor health and safety. Objective: To determine whether abandoned house remediation reduces gun violence and substance-related outcomes and increases perceptions of safety and use of outdoor space. Design, Setting, and Participants: This cluster randomized trial was conducted from January 2017 to August 2020, with interventions occurring between August 2018 and March 2019. The study included abandoned houses across Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, and surveys completed by participants living nearby preintervention and postintervention. Data analysis was performed from March 2021 to September 2022. Interventions: The study consisted of 3 arms: (1) full remediation (installing working windows and doors, cleaning trash, weeding); (2) trash cleanup and weeding only; and (3) a no-intervention control. Main Outcomes and Measures: Difference-in-differences mixed-effects regression models were used to estimate the effect of the interventions on multiple primary outcomes: gun violence (weapons violations, gun assaults, and shootings), illegal substance trafficking and use, public drunkenness, and perceptions of safety and time outside for nearby residents. Results: A master list of 3265 abandoned houses was randomly sorted. From the top of this randomly sorted list, a total of 63 clusters containing 258 abandoned houses were formed and then randomly allocated to 3 study arms. Of the 301 participants interviewed during the preintervention period, 172 (57.1%) were interviewed during the postintervention period and were included in this analysis; participants were predominantly Black, and most were employed. Study neighborhoods were predominantly Black with high percentages of low-income households. Gun violence outcomes increased in all study arms, but increased the least in the full remediation arm. The full housing remediation arm, compared with the control condition, showed reduced weapons violations by -8.43% (95% CI, -14.68% to -1.19%), reduced gun assaults by -13.12% (95% CI, -21.32% to -3.01%), and reduced shootings by a nonsignificant -6.96% (95% CI, -15.32% to 3.03%). The trash cleanup arm was not associated with a significant differential change in any gun violence outcome. Instances of illegal substance trafficking and use and public drunkenness outcomes were not significantly affected by the housing remediation or trash cleanup treatment. Perceptions of neighborhood safety and time spent outside were unaffected by the intervention. The study arms did differ in a baseline characteristic and some preintervention trends, which raises questions regarding other potential nonmeasured differences between study arms that could have influenced estimates. No evidence of displacement of gun violence outcomes was found. Conclusions and Relevance: In this cluster randomized controlled trial among low-income, predominantly Black neighborhoods, inexpensive, straightforward abandoned housing remediation was directly linked to significant relative reductions in weapons violations and gun assaults, and suggestive reductions in shootings. Trial Registration: isrctn.org Identifier: ISRCTN14973997.
Preventive Medicine · 2022 · 14 citations
Senior authorCorresponding- Political Science
- Medicine
- Public relations
Recent grants
NIH · $5.8M · 2017
CE19-001, The Columbia Center for Injury Science and Prevention (CCISP)
NIH · $4.3M · 2019–2024
A randomized trial of abandoned housing remediation, substance abuse and violence
NIH · $2.6M · 2016–2021
NIH · $1.0M · 2018
NIH · $2.7M · 2018
Frequent coauthors
- 206 shared
Brendan G. Carr
Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai
- 132 shared
Douglas J. Wiebe
University of Michigan–Ann Arbor
- 110 shared
Karen C. Albright
SUNY Upstate Medical University
- 105 shared
Catherine Wolff
Université Jean Moulin Lyon III
- 98 shared
Michael T. Mullen
Temple University
- 64 shared
Therese S. Richmond
University of Pennsylvania
- 54 shared
Laura J. Balcer
New York University
- 50 shared
Michelle C. Kondo
Northern Research Station
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