StandardStandard

Nighttime assaults: Using a national emergency department monitoring system to predict occurrence, target prevention and plan services. / Bellis, Mark A; Leckenby, Nicola; Hughes, Karen et al.
Yn: BMC Public Health, Cyfrol 12, 06.09.2012, t. 746.

Allbwn ymchwil: Cyfraniad at gyfnodolynErthygladolygiad gan gymheiriaid

HarvardHarvard

APA

CBE

MLA

VancouverVancouver

Bellis MA, Leckenby N, Hughes K, Luke C, Wyke S, Quigg Z. Nighttime assaults: Using a national emergency department monitoring system to predict occurrence, target prevention and plan services. BMC Public Health. 2012 Medi 6;12:746. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-12-746

Author

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Nighttime assaults

T2 - Using a national emergency department monitoring system to predict occurrence, target prevention and plan services

AU - Bellis, Mark A

AU - Leckenby, Nicola

AU - Hughes, Karen

AU - Luke, Chris

AU - Wyke, Sacha

AU - Quigg, Zara

PY - 2012/9/6

Y1 - 2012/9/6

N2 - BACKGROUND: Emergency department (ED) data have the potential to provide critical intelligence on when violence is most likely to occur and the characteristics of those who suffer the greatest health impacts. We use a national experimental ED monitoring system to examine how it could target violence prevention interventions towards at risk communities and optimise acute responses to calendar, holiday and other celebration-related changes in nighttime assaults.METHODS: A cross-sectional examination of nighttime assault presentations (6.01 pm to 6.00 am; n = 330,172) over a three-year period (31st March 2008 to 30th March 2011) to English EDs analysing changes by weekday, month, holidays, major sporting events, and demographics of those presenting.RESULTS: Males are at greater risk of assault presentation (adjusted odds ratio [AOR] 3.14, 95% confidence intervals [CIs] 3.11-3.16; P < 0.001); with male:female ratios increasing on more violent nights. Risks peak at age 18 years. Deprived individuals have greater risks of presenting across all ages (AOR 3.87, 95% CIs 3.82-3.92; P < 0.001). Proportions of assaults from deprived communities increase midweek. Female presentations in affluent areas peak aged 20 years. By age 13, females from deprived communities exceed this peak. Presentations peak on Friday and Saturday nights and the eves of public holidays; the largest peak is on New Year's Eve. Assaults increase over summer with a nadir in January. Impacts of annual celebrations without holidays vary. Some (Halloween, Guy Fawkes and St Patrick's nights) see increased assaults while others (St George's and Valentine's Day nights) do not. Home nation World Cup football matches are associated with nearly a three times increase in midweek assault presentation. Other football and rugby events examined show no impact. The 2008 Olympics saw assaults fall. The overall calendar model strongly predicts observed presentations (R2 = 0.918; P < 0.001).CONCLUSIONS: To date, the role of ED data has focused on helping target nightlife police activity. Its utility is much greater; capable of targeting and evaluating multi-agency life course approaches to violence prevention and optimising frontline resources. National ED data are critical for fully engaging health services in the prevention of violence.

AB - BACKGROUND: Emergency department (ED) data have the potential to provide critical intelligence on when violence is most likely to occur and the characteristics of those who suffer the greatest health impacts. We use a national experimental ED monitoring system to examine how it could target violence prevention interventions towards at risk communities and optimise acute responses to calendar, holiday and other celebration-related changes in nighttime assaults.METHODS: A cross-sectional examination of nighttime assault presentations (6.01 pm to 6.00 am; n = 330,172) over a three-year period (31st March 2008 to 30th March 2011) to English EDs analysing changes by weekday, month, holidays, major sporting events, and demographics of those presenting.RESULTS: Males are at greater risk of assault presentation (adjusted odds ratio [AOR] 3.14, 95% confidence intervals [CIs] 3.11-3.16; P < 0.001); with male:female ratios increasing on more violent nights. Risks peak at age 18 years. Deprived individuals have greater risks of presenting across all ages (AOR 3.87, 95% CIs 3.82-3.92; P < 0.001). Proportions of assaults from deprived communities increase midweek. Female presentations in affluent areas peak aged 20 years. By age 13, females from deprived communities exceed this peak. Presentations peak on Friday and Saturday nights and the eves of public holidays; the largest peak is on New Year's Eve. Assaults increase over summer with a nadir in January. Impacts of annual celebrations without holidays vary. Some (Halloween, Guy Fawkes and St Patrick's nights) see increased assaults while others (St George's and Valentine's Day nights) do not. Home nation World Cup football matches are associated with nearly a three times increase in midweek assault presentation. Other football and rugby events examined show no impact. The 2008 Olympics saw assaults fall. The overall calendar model strongly predicts observed presentations (R2 = 0.918; P < 0.001).CONCLUSIONS: To date, the role of ED data has focused on helping target nightlife police activity. Its utility is much greater; capable of targeting and evaluating multi-agency life course approaches to violence prevention and optimising frontline resources. National ED data are critical for fully engaging health services in the prevention of violence.

KW - Adolescent

KW - Adult

KW - After-Hours Care

KW - Cross-Sectional Studies

KW - Emergency Service, Hospital

KW - Female

KW - Humans

KW - Male

KW - Middle Aged

KW - Odds Ratio

KW - Population Surveillance

KW - Violence

KW - Young Adult

KW - Journal Article

U2 - 10.1186/1471-2458-12-746

DO - 10.1186/1471-2458-12-746

M3 - Article

C2 - 22950487

VL - 12

SP - 746

JO - BMC Public Health

JF - BMC Public Health

SN - 1471-2458

ER -