General Safety

The New Mexico Youth Risk & Resiliency Survey (NM-YRRS) monitors health-related behaviors among adolescents that contribute to leading causes of death and disability. 1 Data from NM-YRRS reveal key trends in youth safety, including injury and violence prevention. The survey tracks the rate of seatbelt use, helmet use, texting while driving, physical fights, carrying weapons or guns on school property, bullying and electronically bullying, and dating violence. Notably, students tend to skip school due to unsafe concerns, which can exacerbate absenteeism and poor academic performance.


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Understanding the Charts - and a Word about Error Bars

The following bar graphs show how many New Mexico high school students engaged in certain behaviors. The numbers are shown as percentages for different groups of students.

The first bar graph shows the overall rate (prevalence) for all New Mexico high school students combined.

On the other graphs, you’ll see a black dotted line that shows the prevalence for the whole state, and a grey shaded area around the dotted line that shows the 95% confidence interval.

Confidence Intervals

Because of the high cost and logistical complications involved in conducting a statewide survey, the NM-YRRS was administered to a sample of students, rather than to every single student in each school district. Because NM-YRRS data are from a sample of students, and not the entire student body, the results in this report are estimates. As with all estimates, there is some uncertainty associated with each of these results. On the charts in this report, this degree of uncertainty is represented by an error bar (confidence interval). The error bar is the thin black line that extends left and right of the end of each bar in a chart. One of the major influences on the size of the confidence interval or error bar is the number of participants in the survey. In general, this means that with more students participating in the survey, there will be a higher degree of confidence in the results (i.e., error bars will be smaller).

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