Nutrition is an important element for driving the motivation of youths at risk. Nutrition, for example, is an important tool for young people to focus on school when young people are already working on the problem at home when in danger. If a young person becomes malnourished without ingesting the correct nutrition, that opportunity will decrease. According to Spooner (1999), "Young people at risk may be particularly resistant to efforts to encourage them to" health "if health is considered traditional"
Risk factors at the community level will grow in communities with high crime rates. Many studies have shown that growing in communities with high crime rates is a risk factor for youth violence (52). Crime, drug trafficking, gangsters, exposure to poor houses suggests the possibility of juvenile violence (1). According to a study, children who knew many adult offenders were more likely to violence before 18 years of age (42). Risk factors at the social level get guns. International cross-sectional studies of high-income countries have shown that the higher the level of supply of guns, the higher the number of gun deaths on average is (71, 72). Meta-analysis studies also indicate that gun-related death occurs in households with households with guns compared to households without guns (73).
The combination of personal, human relations, community, and social factors contributes to the risk of teenage violence. Research on youth violence has deepened our understanding of factors that make certain people more vulnerable to harm and crime. Risk factors are a feature related to youth violence, but it is not a direct cause of youth violence. Mercy J, Butchart A, Farrington D, Cerdám. With youth violence: Krug E, Dahlberg LL, Mercy JA, Zwi AB, Lozano R, editor. Report on world violence and health Geneva (Switzerland): World Health Organization, 2002. 25 to 56 available places: URL: http: //www.who.int/violence_injury_prevention/violence/global_campaign/en/chap2.pdf