ResearchPublications

Racial differences in the association of physical disability and healthcare access with firearm violence at the neighborhood level in Chicago, 2011-2023
Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Firearm violence remains a public health crisis in the United States, disproportionately affecting racially marginalized and historically disinvested neighborhoods. The relationship between neighborhood-level disability prevalence and healthcare access with firearm violence risk remains poorly understood.

METHODS: This ecological, spatiotemporal analysis of 77 community areas in Chicago from 2011 to 2023 used Bayesian negative binomial models to estimate associations between community-level disability prevalence and healthcare underservice—defined as proportion of land designated as a Medically Underserved Area (MUA)—with annual rates of nonfatal firearm victimizations and firearm homicides. Stratified models by neighborhood racial/ethnic plurality were also explored. Analyses were conducted from April 2025 to March 2026.

RESULTS: A 5–percentage point increase in disability prevalence was associated with a 10% higher rate of firearm victimization (95% credible interval [CrI], 2%–18%) and an 19% higher rate of firearm homicide (95% CrI, 8%–31%). A 5–percentage point increase in MUA coverage was associated with a 10% increase in firearm victimization (95% CrI, 6%–15%) and 9% increase in firearm homicide (95% CrI, 5%–13%). In stratified models, disability was most strongly associated with firearm violence in plurality non-Hispanic Black neighborhoods. Associations between MUA coverage and firearm violence were largest in plurality non-Hispanic white and Hispanic neighborhoods.

CONCLUSIONS: Neighborhood-level disability and healthcare underservice are significantly associated with firearm violence in Chicago, with differences by racial/ethnic composition. Findings underscore the need to integrate disability and healthcare access into public health violence prevention frameworks.

Full citation:
Allen B, Basaraba C, Offstein M, Joshi S, Jacobs J (2026).
Racial differences in the association of physical disability and healthcare access with firearm violence at the neighborhood level in Chicago, 2011-2023
American Journal of Preventive Medicine [Epub 2026 Apr 22]. doi: 10.1016/j.amepre.2026.108384.