Left out in the cold: Homicide amongst persons experiencing homelessness

There is no American population-level study comparing the characteristics of homicides involving victims who were vs were not experiencing homelessness at time of death. We aim to identify variables surrounding homeless homicide that are unique, and intervenable. In this retrospective cohort study,...

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Veröffentlicht in:The American journal of surgery 2024-01, Vol.227, p.204-207
Hauptverfasser: Henkind, Rebecca, Carmichael, Heather, Stearns, Dorothy R., Thomas, Madeline, Abbitt, Danielle, Myers, Quintin W.O., Zakrison, Tanya, Velopulos, Catherine G.
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container_end_page 207
container_issue
container_start_page 204
container_title The American journal of surgery
container_volume 227
creator Henkind, Rebecca
Carmichael, Heather
Stearns, Dorothy R.
Thomas, Madeline
Abbitt, Danielle
Myers, Quintin W.O.
Zakrison, Tanya
Velopulos, Catherine G.
description There is no American population-level study comparing the characteristics of homicides involving victims who were vs were not experiencing homelessness at time of death. We aim to identify variables surrounding homeless homicide that are unique, and intervenable. In this retrospective cohort study, we reviewed the National Violent Death Reporting System (NVDRS) from 2003 to 2018 and compared the characteristics surrounding homicides of victims who were not-homeless (cohort 1) vs experiencing homelessness (cohort 2) at death. We utilized the available perpetrator data to characterize the average perpetrator for each cohort. We considered housing status to be our primary predictor and recorded NVDRS variables, such as age of victims and likelihood to know perpetrators, to be our primary outcomes. 81,212 Homicide Victims and 60,982 Homicide Perpetrators were included in analysis. Homeless cohort victims were more likely younger, White, male, and to have a known mental health or substance abuse disorder. PEH were also more likely to have co-morbid mental health and substance abuse disorders but were roughly half as likely to be getting treatment for said disorders. Circumstances surrounding incidents, including geographic location, mechanism of injury, and premeditation, varied; homeless cohort victims were more likely to die in random acts of violence, but were less likely to die via firearm. There is room for targeted interventions against homeless homicides. Epidemiological, Level IV. [Display omitted] •Homeless cohort victims were more likely younger, White, male, and to have a known mental health or substance abuse disorder.•PEH were more likely to have co-morbid mental health and substance abuse disorders but were half as likely to be getting treatment for said disorders.•Homeless cohort victims were more likely to die in random acts of violence, but were less likely to die via firearm.•There is room for targeted intervention against homeless homicide.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.amjsurg.2023.09.052
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PEH were also more likely to have co-morbid mental health and substance abuse disorders but were roughly half as likely to be getting treatment for said disorders. Circumstances surrounding incidents, including geographic location, mechanism of injury, and premeditation, varied; homeless cohort victims were more likely to die in random acts of violence, but were less likely to die via firearm. There is room for targeted interventions against homeless homicides. Epidemiological, Level IV. 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subjects Aggression
Death
Demographics
Disorders
Drug abuse
Epidemiology
Firearm injury
Geographical locations
Homeless people
Homelessness
Homicide
Humans
Ill-Housed Persons
Male
Mental disorders
Mental health
Mortality
Murders & murder attempts
National Violent Death Reporting System
Population
Population studies
Retrospective Studies
Substance-Related Disorders - epidemiology
United States - epidemiology
title Left out in the cold: Homicide amongst persons experiencing homelessness
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