Hensel, Devon J.Kriech, Amber C.Mintus, Kenzie L.Seybold, Peter J.2019-05-232019-05-232019-05https://hdl.handle.net/1805/19440http://dx.doi.org/10.7912/C2/717Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis (IUPUI)Using data from the 2007-2017 cycles of the national Youth Risk Behavior Survey (YRBS), this researcher aimed to understand how weapons carrying mediates the association between bullying and mental health outcomes. I dichotomized four bullying outcomes to create one new carried a weapon after bullied (CWB) (no/yes; e.g. did not carry a weapon post-bullying vs. did carry a weapon post-bullying) for each bullying type. Mental health outcomes included (all dichotomized, past 2 weeks, no/yes): felt sad or hopeless, seriously considered suicide, had a plan for suicide and attempted suicide. I used descriptive statistics and binary logistic regression adjusted for YRBS sampling methods and weighting (Stata 15.0). Initial results showed that weapons carrying has a complex relationship with mental health after bullying. One notable finding is that individuals who had been in a physical fight were the most likely to carry a weapon (N = 268), followed by those who had been threatened at school (N = 233). Additionally, more students who had been bullied at school (N = 185) carried a weapon than those who were victims of cyberbullying (N = 166). Another interesting result found that across all bullying types, males were 2 to 3 times more likely to carrying a weapon as a result of being bullied. In terms of mental health, being threatened at school was the most significant bullying type in relation to suicidal ideation.en-USAttribution-NoDerivs 3.0 United StatesBullyingWeaponsMental HealthAdolescenceSuicidal IdeationBullying, Weapons Carrying, and Mental Health Outcomes Among U.S. High School StudentsThesis