“…Based upon a review of the literature on DMST risk factors, social work researchers should pay close attention to risks like juvenile justice involvement (Chohaney, 2016; Godsoe, 2015), child welfare (i.e., child protective services [CPS]) involvement (Cavazos, 2016; Countryman-Roswurm & Bolin, 2014; Reid, 2010), substance use or abuse and other mental health concerns (Reid & Piquero, 2014), and minority race (Butler, 2015; Choi, 2015; Ocen, 2015; Perkins & Ruiz, 2017) in trying to understand and develop DMST prevention strategies. Perhaps more than any other risk factor, however, a cumulation of the literature suggests that victims’ unmet basic needs are extremely important for understanding adolescents’ DMST risk as the available literature suggests that victims’ “unmet basic needs” is the risk factor that ties all of the other risk factors to one another (see Twis, 2019). (Of note, this study conceptualizes “unmet basic needs” as victims’ lack of access to a vital, basic human need like shelter or food; see Maslow, 1943).…”