In a review of progress on Healthy People 2000
objectives for Violent and Abusive Behavior, the Centers for
Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) led a discussion of selected
objectives to achieve a "Safe America."
7.1 Data for 1995 (9.4 per 100,000)
indicate a further decline in the age-adjusted homicide rate per
100,000 people from the peak of 10.8 in 1991. The year 2000
target is 7.2. Preliminary 1995 data (115.6 per 100,000) for
black males aged 15-34 indicate movement toward the target of
72.4.
7.2 Preliminary data for 1995 show an
age-adjusted suicide rate of 11 per 100,000, a decline from
baseline levels. The year 2000 target is 10.5. Data for 1994 all
special populations except white males aged 65 and older show
movement away from the targets.
7.3 For firearm-related deaths,
preliminary age-adjusted data for 1995 (13.5 per 100,000) show a
decrease from the 1994 rate and the 1990 baseline (14.6). The
year 2000 target is 11.6. Data for 1994 for Blacks (35.5 per
100,000) indicate that rates are still above the 1990 baseline
(33.4) and the target (30).
7.4 The incidence of maltreatment of
children younger than age 18 was 41.9 per 1,000 children in 1993,
an 85 percent increase from the baseline. The year 2000 target is
22.6.
7.5 The year 2000 target is to reduce
physical abuse directed at women by male partners to no more than
27 incidents per 1,000 couples. The original data source is no
longer available. However, data from the Bureau of Justice
Statistics' National Crime Victimization Survey suggests an
increase in physical abuse rates.
7.6 Data from the Crime Victimization
Survey indicate there were 12.7 assault injuries among people
aged 12 and older in 1994. Because the survey was redesigned in
1992, the data are no longer comparable to the baseline and the
year 2000 target.
7.7 Data on rape and attempted rape of
females aged 12 and older are no longer comparable to the year
2000 target and the baseline, due to the 1992 redesign of the
Crime Victimization Survey. Data for 1994 indicate rates of 270
per 100,000 females aged 12 and older and 527 per 100,000 for
females aged 12-34.
7.8 The rate of injurious suicide
attempts among adolescents aged 14-17 was 2.8 percent in 1995.
The year 2000 target is 1.8 percent. The 1995 rate for female
adolescents aged 14-17 has increased from 2.5 percent in 1991 to
3.4 percent in 1995. The target is 2 percent.
7.9 In 1995, there were 128 incidents of
physical fighting among adolescents aged 14-17 per 100 students
per month. The year 2000 target is 110. The rate for black males
aged 14-17 was 181 per 100 students per month, a decrease from
the 1991 baseline of 207. The target is 160.
7.10 There has been a decrease from the
1991 baseline of 107 in the incidence of weapon-carrying by
adolescents aged 14-17. The 1995 rate was 81 per 100 students per
month, which surpasses the year 2000 target of 86. There has also
been a decrease from 134 in 1991 to 85 in 1995 in the rate for
black adolescents aged 14-17. The target of 105 has been met.
7.11 The 1995 National Health Interview
Survey indicates that 20 percent of people who reported owning a
firearm stored the weapon unlocked or loaded. These data provide
a baseline for this objective on inappropriate storage of
weapons.
7.13 By 1995, 48 States had implemented
systems to review unexplained deaths of children. The year 2000
target of 45 has been met.
7.15 The National Coalition Against
Domestic Violence provided the 1987 baseline that 40 percent of
battered women and their children were turned away from emergency
housing, due to lack of space. There is no identified data source
for updates.
7.16 The School Health Policies and
Programs Study reports that 58.3 percent of middle, junior and
senior high schools taught conflict resolution as a required
course in 1995. This new baseline for the objective exceeds the
year 2000 target of 50 percent.
7.18 The National Center for
Institutions and Alternatives (NCIA) reports that one State met
NCIA guidelines in 1996 for suicide prevention in jails, a
decrease from the 1992 baseline of 2 States. However, the Bureau
of Justice Statistics reports that 79.5 percent of jails have
suicide prevention policies and training for staff.
7.19 The year 2000 target for the
enactment of laws requiring proper firearms storage to minimize
access by minors is 50 States and the District of Columbia. The
number reached 15 in 1996, an increase from the 1989 baseline of
one.
Data sources are not available for establishing
baselines and tracking objectives 7.12, 7.14 and 7.17.
All information about the objectives is based on data compiled by
the CDC National Center for Health Statistics.
HIGHLIGHTS
- At the 1996 World Health Assembly, 190
nations acknowledged violence as a public health problem.
- In the United States, recent data show
declines in homicide--particularly for those involving
firearms--suicide, and weapon-carrying among high school
youth.
- New York City has achieved a 25 percent
reduction in violent crimes, including homicide. An
important element in this success was a campaign against
non-violent crime.
- In Boston, parole officers routinely ride
with the police in patrol cars. Their success in
identifying parole violators has helped lead to a
reduction in violent crime. Another contributing factor
to the lowering of crime rates in that city is that half
of the schools provide training in conflict resolution.
- In the age group 15-34, firearms are the
leading cause of injury deaths, exceeding the number of
deaths from auto accidents. In 10 States and the District
of Columbia, they are the leading cause of injury deaths
for the total population.
- The rate of firearm injuries can be
reduced by employing a public health model similar to
that which led to a reduction in injuries from motor
vehicle crashes. This entails close cooperation among
police, crime laboratories and hospitals.
- Studies have shown that asking questions
about suicide does not increase the likelihood that
patients will attempt suicide.
A number of projects were highlighted:
- In Dayton, Ohio, the school-based Positive
Adolescent Choices Training (PACT) program focuses on
black adolescents who are at high risk of becoming
perpetrators or victims of violence. Adolescents in the
program have shown reductions in violent confrontations
and improvements in managing conflict.
- In the Healthy Families America program,
prenatal home visits by counsellors are linked to better
birth outcomes and decreased rates of child abuse.
- In Houston, Texas, the Black Male
Initiative has achieved a large measure of success in
preventing violence among minority youth and young adults
through an intergenerational approach--college students
mentor high school students, high school students mentor
middle school students, middle school students mentor
elementary school pupils, and elementary school pupils
mentor Head Start children.
- The Milwaukee Women's Center initiated a
public awareness campaign designed to decrease violence
against women. Milwaukee Transit Company buses display
the Center's messages about family and intimate partner
violence. The number of calls to domestic violence
hotlines and agencies have increased, including calls
from men admitting they need help.
- In rural New Mexico, tribal leaders and
other members of the Jicarilla Apache Tribe have engaged
in a suicide prevention effort in schools and a public
education campaign to make the community aware of the
problem. The number of suicide attempts has dropped and
no suicides were recorded in 1995.
FOLLOW-UP
- Reach a better understanding of the impact
of intimate partner violence through studies that help to
quantify the magnitude of the problem.
- Determine ways to improve the reporting of
domestic violence by establishing consensus about
definitions and refining methods for collecting data.
- Examine the relative contribution of
social norms, law enforcement and the public health
approach in violence prevention.
- Determine the impact of conflict
resolution training and other school-based curricula
dealing with violence prevention.
- Address the rising rates of black
adolescent male suicide by improving techniques for
identifying people likely to attempt suicide and
connecting them to counselling programs.
- Conduct longitudinal studies to examine
the intergenerational impact of violence, e.g., the
phenomenon that abused boys and those who have observed
abuse in their families grow up more likely to be abusers
of their wives and children.
- Explore the feasibility and estimate the
cost of a firearms injury reporting system.
PARTICIPANTS
Administration for Children and Families
Association of State and Territorial Health Officials
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Department of Justice
Georgia Department of Public Health
Indian Health Service
Jicarilla Apache Tribe
Medical College of Wisconsin
Milwaukee Women's Center
National Committee for the Prevention of Child Abuse
New Hampshire Department of Public Health
Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation
Office of Disease Prevention and Health Promotion
Office of Minority Health
Office of Public Health and Science
Office of the Surgeon General
Office on Women's Health
Regional Health Administrator, Region III
Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration
Texas Southern University
Violence Prevention Training Institute
Wright State University
Philip R. Lee, M.D.
Assistant Secretary for Health
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