Literature DB >> 22297618

The epidemiology of finding a dead body: reports from inner-city Baltimore, Maryland US.

Carl Latkin1, Cui Yang, Britt Ehrhardt, Alicia Hulbert.   

Abstract

In the US, there are no national statistics on encountering a dead body, which can be viewed as a measure of community health and a stressful life event. Participants for an HIV prevention intervention targeting drug users were recruited in areas of inner-city Baltimore, Maryland. Nine hundred and fifty-one respondents, most with a history of drug use, were asked "have you ever found a dead body?" and 17.0% reported they had. Leading causes of death were: violence (37%), natural causes (22.2%), drug overdose (21.6%), accidental death (3.1%), and suicide (2.5%). In multivariate logistic models, respondents with longer history of drug use and more roles in a drug economy were more likely to be exposed to a dead body. The study results suggest that this population has a high level of experiences with mortality associated with violence and drugs. To obtain a better understanding of community health, future studies should assess not only morbidity and mortality, but also how death and illness is experienced by the community.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 22297618      PMCID: PMC3406247          DOI: 10.1007/s10597-012-9492-3

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Community Ment Health J        ISSN: 0010-3853


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Authors:  Y I Hser; V Hoffman; C E Grella; M D Anglin
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  8 in total
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  2 in total

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