
Rebecca Cunningham
· Professor, Division of Epidemiology & Community HealthVerifiedUniversity of Minnesota · Population Health Sciences
Active 1989–2026
About
Rebecca Cunningham is a professor in the Division of Epidemiology & Community Health at the School of Public Health. Her research has focused on public health and injury and violence prevention, with scientific collaborations spanning engineering, communications, transportation, and public policy. She has been recognized for her contributions with awards such as the Outstanding Contribution in Research Award from the American College of Emergency Physicians and the Excellence in Research Award from the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine. In 2019, she was elected to the National Academy of Medicine. Cunningham joined the University of Michigan in 1999 as an emergency medicine physician with faculty appointments in the Medical School and the School of Public Health. In 2024, she became the system-wide president of the University of Minnesota, emphasizing accessible, world-class education and advancing the university’s mission to enhance health, safety, and prosperity.
Research topics
- Medicine
- Environmental health
- Nursing
- Developmental psychology
- Computer Security
- Psychology
- Psychiatry
- Internal medicine
- Virology
- Clinical psychology
- Demography
- Social psychology
- Criminology
Selected publications
Multisite External Validation of a Clinical Screening Tool for Interpersonal Firearm Violence Risk
Annals of Internal Medicine · 2026-04-06
articleSenior authorBACKGROUND: Screening tools for interpersonal firearm violence (FV) are needed to facilitate prevention. OBJECTIVE: To validate the 4-item, 10-point SaFETy (Serious fighting, Friend weapon carrying, community Environment, and firearm Threats) score. DESIGN: Prospective longitudinal study. SETTING: 4 level 1 emergency departments (EDs) in 3 cities. PARTICIPANTS: Adults aged 18 to 24 years seen in an ED for any reason. MEASUREMENTS: FV (shooting someone or being shot) 12 months after baseline from self-report and medical record review, SaFETy score, and self-reported baseline covariates (demographic characteristics; baseline assault injury; violence-related ED use in the past 6 months; drug misuse; anxiety, depression, and posttraumatic stress screening; and FV in the past 6 months). RESULTS: = 0.025). The added contribution of the SaFETy score to predictions based only on variables typically available at triage (demographic data, ED visit reason, and recent ED use) was larger. LIMITATION: Outcomes were primarily self-reported, and the highest-risk subsamples were more likely to have missing data. CONCLUSION: The SaFETy score predicts FV risk in general samples of young adults in the ED. A comprehensive covariate set, involving factors that are difficult or intrusive to measure, did not reproduce the SaFETy score's risk gradient or explain its discriminatory power, suggesting that the score provides distinct predictive information. PRIMARY FUNDING SOURCE: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
SSRN Electronic Journal · 2026-01-01
preprintOpen accessYouth & Society · 2024-05-30 · 6 citations
articleOpen accessYouth interpersonal firearm violence (e.g., homicides) disproportionately affects Black youth and contributes to racial health disparities. Institutional racial discrimination - in particular, residential racial segregation - is a determinant of racial disparities in firearm violence. Residential racial segregation, which is enforced to limit racially minoritized members to undesirable residential areas (e.g., fewer educational and employment opportunities), is associated with the socioecological risk factors of youth firearm violence (e.g., exposure to violence [ETV], neighborhood disadvantage). The socioecological mechanisms underlying the link between, however, remains unclear. Therefore, we tested the mediating role of neighborhood disadvantage (mediator 1) and ETV (mediator 2) in the association between residential racial segregation and youth firearm violence. Participants consisted of 338 Black youth who used illicit drugs in the past year and sought care in an urban emergency department. Using serial mediation analysis, residential racial segregation was indirectly associated with youth firearm violence via neighborhood disadvantage and then exposure to violence. Identifying the downstream socioecological consequences of residential segregation can inform the development of firearm violence prevention programs that address the socioecological consequences of racism.
Annals of Internal Medicine · 2024-04-22 · 10 citations
letterOpen accessSenior authorFirearm ownership for protection in the USA, 2023: results from a nationally representative survey
Injury Prevention · 2024-07-25 · 12 citations
articleOpen accessOBJECTIVE: This study aims to characterise the motivations of firearm owners and examine whether firearm ownership motivations and carriage varied by state stand your ground law status. METHODS: Using a nationally representative survey of US adults in 2023, we asked firearm owners (n=2477) about their firearm motivations and behaviours, including reason(s) for ownership. RESULTS: Of all firearm owners, 78.8% (95% CI 76.0% to 81.0%) owned a firearm for protection, and 58.1% (95% CI 54.3% to 62.0%) carried a firearm outside their home in the last 12 months. Firearm ownership for protection was not significantly associated with stand your ground laws, but firearm carriage was more prevalent in states with stand your ground laws (50.1% (95% CI 47.0% to 53.0%) vs 34.9% (95% CI 25.0% to 46.0%)). Gender (women) and race (minority groups) emerged as key correlates for firearm ownership for protection (vs other ownership motivations). For example, black and Asian women (98.8%) almost exclusively owned firearms for protection. CONCLUSIONS: Protection was the dominant reason for firearm ownership in 2023, motivating 65 million Americans to own firearms and appealing to different strata of the population.
Research Square · 2024-10-01
preprintOpen accessALFP Debate: Tiered Training and Licensure as a Model for the Future of Pharmacy Education
American Journal of Pharmaceutical Education · 2024-09-01
articleOpen accessThe history of firearm injury prevention research
Elsevier eBooks · 2024-11-01 · 1 citations
book-chapterSenior authorThe American Journal of Drug and Alcohol Abuse · 2024-03-03 · 1 citations
articleOpen accessTailored interventions may address gender differences in coping with experiencing violence - including interventions that promote parental support among males and reduce influence from parental substance use among females.
Injury Epidemiology · 2024-11-14 · 2 citations
articleOpen accessBACKGROUND: Firearm injuries are the leading cause of death for U.S. adolescents. Given the prevalence of firearm ownership in the U.S., particularly among parental figures in homes with children and teens, and the relationship between firearm access and injury outcomes, it is vital to shed light on potential parental motivations for keeping firearms in their homes. The purpose of this analysis was to examine whether exposure to community violence is associated with parental firearm ownership. METHODS: Data from the Firearm Safety Among Children and Teens Consortium's National Survey (6/24/2020-7/24/2020) was examined. The survey sample comprised parents/caregivers of high-school-age teens (age 14-18). The survey examined various measures, including firearm ownership, storage, community violence exposure, and sociodemographic characteristics. Stepwise logistic regression was used to examine the association between community violence exposure and parental firearm ownership. RESULTS: The study included 2,924 participants, with 45.1% identifying as male, 12.9% identifying as Hispanic, and 25.3% identifying as non-White. Among these participants, 43.1% reported firearm ownership, and 49.9% reported exposure to community violence. Regression models demonstrate that community violence exposure is associated with an increased likelihood of firearm ownership among parents/caregivers of high-school age teens (OR = 1.08, p < 0.05). Other significant predictors of firearm ownership among parents/caregivers included parent/caregiver age (OR = 0.99, p < 0.01), marital status (OR = 1.29, p < 0.05), and educational attainment (OR = 0.60, p < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS: The findings supported the hypothesis that community violence exposure was associated with an increased likelihood of parental firearm ownership, even after adjusting for potential confounders. These findings contribute to the existing literature by shedding light on the possible contributing factors for firearm ownership among parents/caregivers of teens. Public health interventions focused on raising awareness about the risks of firearm access in households with youths, providing counseling on locked storage practices, and offering resources for accessing secure firearm storage options, such as rapid access storage, may contribute to reducing firearm access among youth. Additionally, community-based initiatives focused on violence prevention and addressing the root causes of community violence can help create safer environments, thereby reducing the perceived need for accessible firearms in the home by parents and caregivers.
Recent grants
The Unviersity of Michigan Injury Center
NIH · $5.6M · 2012–2019
Substance use, violence and HIV risk: Age-specific risk factors and drivers of comorbidity.
NIH · $77k · 2015–2018
Building Research Capacity for Firearm Safety Among Children
NIH · $4.9M · 2017–2023
NIH · $3.5M · 2014
CE19-001, University of Michigan Injury Prevention Center 2019-2024
NIH · $4.4M · 2019–2024
Frequent coauthors
- 589 shared
Maureen A. Walton
University of Michigan–Ann Arbor
- 372 shared
Marc A. Zimmerman
Michigan Department of Health and Human Services
- 295 shared
Patrick M. Carter
Michigan Department of Health and Human Services
- 233 shared
Frederic C. Blow
University of Michigan–Ann Arbor
- 222 shared
Stephen T. Chermack
University of Michigan–Ann Arbor
- 193 shared
Jason E. Goldstick
University of Michigan–Ann Arbor
- 102 shared
Erin E. Bonar
University of Michigan–Ann Arbor
- 102 shared
Quyen Epstein‐Ngo
University of Michigan–Ann Arbor
Awards & honors
- Notable Leader in Higher Education, Crain’s Detroit Business…
- Outstanding Contribution in Research Award, American College…
- Excellence in Research Award, Society for Academic Emergency…
- Member of the National Academy of Sciences (2019)
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