Literature DB >> 11574800

Emergency medicine and police collaboration to prevent community violence.

J P Shepherd1.   

Abstract

An important responsibility of emergency departments is the management of injuries sustained in assaults. Most assaults, including many causing serious injury, are not reported and not recorded by the police. This is important because police investigation and the conviction of offenders has a substantial deterrent effect and because information about the circumstances of intentional injury is key to prevention. Recent investigation of ED-police collaboration has shown that many of the injured, and ED staff want offenses to be reported but that there are attitudinal, logistic, and ethical-legal obstacles to achieving this. Organized joint efforts by emergency medicine personnel and police departments, on the basis of a sound legal and ethical framework to protect the rights of both victims and offenders, should deter more violent offenders and would-be violent offenders. They also provide the police with unique aggregate, nonconfidential information that is of substantial help in tackling violence. ED data can be used to measure and refine violence prevention initiatives and are being developed as the basis of a new, independent measure of police performance. Strategies, practical ideas to overcome obstacles, and directions for future research are suggested.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2001        PMID: 11574800     DOI: 10.1067/mem.2001.114317

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Emerg Med        ISSN: 0196-0644            Impact factor:   5.721


  6 in total

1.  Poor Health and Violent Crime Hot Spots: Mitigating the Undesirable Co-Occurrence Through Focused Place-Based Interventions.

Authors:  Beidi Dong; Clair M White; David L Weisburd
Journal:  Am J Prev Med       Date:  2020-02-12       Impact factor: 5.043

2.  Recording of community violence by medical and police services.

Authors:  I Sutherland; V Sivarajasingam; J P Shepherd
Journal:  Inj Prev       Date:  2002-09       Impact factor: 2.399

3.  Use of, and outputs from, an assault patient questionnaire within accident and emergency departments on Merseyside.

Authors:  C A Young; J P Douglass
Journal:  Emerg Med J       Date:  2003-05       Impact factor: 2.740

4.  Who Shot Ya? How Emergency Departments Can Collect Reliable Police Shooting Data.

Authors:  Joseph B Richardson; Christopher St Vil; Carnell Cooper
Journal:  J Urban Health       Date:  2016-04       Impact factor: 3.671

5.  Effectiveness of anonymised information sharing and use in health service, police, and local government partnership for preventing violence related injury: experimental study and time series analysis.

Authors:  Curtis Florence; Jonathan Shepherd; Iain Brennan; Thomas Simon
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  2011-06-16

6.  A Stab in the Dark?: A Research Note on Temporal Patterns of Street Robbery.

Authors:  Lisa Tompson; Kate Bowers
Journal:  J Res Crime Delinq       Date:  2013-11
  6 in total

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