# Predisposing Factors and Acute Precipitants for Race/Ethnicity-Related Resident-to-Resident Aggression

**Authors:** E-Shien Chang, Hannah Mason, Sara Czaja, Karl Pillemer, Mark Lachs, Tony Rosen

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igaf122.873 · Innovation in Aging · 2025-12-31

## TL;DR

This study explores how race and ethnicity contribute to aggression between residents in nursing homes and identifies factors that lead to such behavior.

## Contribution

The study introduces a conceptual framework for race/ethnicity-related resident-to-resident aggression, highlighting unique predisposing and precipitating factors.

## Key findings

- Nine types of race/ethnicity-related resident-to-resident aggression were identified, including physical violence and microaggressions.
- Ten unique predisposing factors and eight unique precipitants were found to specifically contribute to race/ethnicity-related aggression.
- A conceptual framework was developed to show how factors at different levels contribute to this form of aggression.

## Abstract

Resident-to-resident aggression (RRA) is a prevalent form of mistreatment in long-term care facilities. Some episodes of RRA are motivated by racial or ethnic differences between residents, but little research has investigated this aspect of the phenomenon. Guided by a theory-informed perspective, we qualitatively explored the predisposing factors and acute precipitants of this race/ethnicity-related resident-to-resident aggression (RE-RRA), defined as RRA motivated by racial or ethnic differences or conflicts that would not have occurred between residents of the same race or ethnicity. We conducted focus groups (n = 9) and in-depth interviews (n = 12) with 81 clinical and non-clinical staff members at two nursing homes in New York. Qualitative data was coded using a thematic approach. We identified nine significant types of RE-RRA, ranging from physical violence and microaggression to racial avoidance. Consistent with previous research, we found 20 predisposing factors and 14 acute precipitants contributing to RRA overall that contributed to RE-RRA. Notably, 10 predisposing factors and 8 precipitants were uniquely drivers of RE-RRA. We synthesized these findings into a conceptual framework to illustrate how distinct factors operate across resident, staff, facility, and structural levels to cause RE-RRA. Our findings provide the preliminary foundation for developing necessary prevention and intervention programs and emphasize the need to consider distinct race/ethnicity-related dynamics in RRA prevention and intervention research. Also, this represents a critical area of focus to enhance the quality of care among racially and ethnically diverse long-term care residents.

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12760020