Murder and assault arrests of White House cases: clinical and demographic correlates of violence subsequent to civil commitment

The authors studied arrest records and clinical data on 217 persons formerly hospitalized as "White House Cases" because they were psychotically preoccupied with prominent political figures. Prior arrest for violent crime was the variable most strongly associated with arrest for violent cr...

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Veröffentlicht in:The American journal of psychiatry 1989-05, Vol.146 (5), p.645-651
Hauptverfasser: SHORE, D, FILSON, C. R, JOHNSON, W. E, RAE, D. S, MUEHRER, P, KELLEY, D. J, DAVIS, T. S, WALDMAN, I. N, JED WYATT, R
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The authors studied arrest records and clinical data on 217 persons formerly hospitalized as "White House Cases" because they were psychotically preoccupied with prominent political figures. Prior arrest for violent crime was the variable most strongly associated with arrest for violent crime after hospital discharge. Male gender and a history of weapons possession were also correlated with future violence. For those with prior violent crime arrests, hospital incidents requiring seclusion were also associated with later violence. For those without prior arrests, subsequent violence was associated with threats, living outside Washington, and command hallucinations. For those previously arrested for nonviolent crimes, only persecutory delusions were associated with later violence.
ISSN:0002-953X
1535-7228
DOI:10.1176/ajp.146.5.645