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Unexpected Arrest-Related Deaths in America: 12 Months of Open Source Surveillance

INTRODUCTION: Sudden, unexpected arrest-related death (ARD) has been associated with drug abuse, extreme delirium or certain police practices. There is insufficient surveillance and causation data available. We report 12 months of surveillance data using a novel data collection methodology. METHODS:...

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Autores principales: Ho, Jeffrey D., Heegaard, William G., Dawes, Donald M., Natarajan, Sridhar, Reardon, Robert F., Miner, James R.
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Department of Emergency Medicine, University of California, Irvine School of Medicine 2009
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2691515/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19561821
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author Ho, Jeffrey D.
Heegaard, William G.
Dawes, Donald M.
Natarajan, Sridhar
Reardon, Robert F.
Miner, James R.
author_facet Ho, Jeffrey D.
Heegaard, William G.
Dawes, Donald M.
Natarajan, Sridhar
Reardon, Robert F.
Miner, James R.
author_sort Ho, Jeffrey D.
collection PubMed
description INTRODUCTION: Sudden, unexpected arrest-related death (ARD) has been associated with drug abuse, extreme delirium or certain police practices. There is insufficient surveillance and causation data available. We report 12 months of surveillance data using a novel data collection methodology. METHODS: We used an open-source, prospective method to collect 12 consecutive months of data, including demographics, behavior, illicit substance use, control methods used, and time of collapse after law enforcement contact. Descriptive analysis and chi-square testing were applied. RESULTS: There were 162 ARD events reported that met inclusion criteria. The majority were male with mean age 36 years, and involved bizarre, agitated behavior and reports of drug abuse just prior to death. Law enforcement control techniques included none (14%); empty-hand techniques (69%); intermediate weapons such as TASER(®) device, impact weapon or chemical irritant spray (52%); and deadly force (12%). Time from contact to subject collapse included instantaneous (13%), within the first hour (53%) and 1–48 hours (35%). Significant collapse time associations occurred with the use of certain intermediate weapons. CONCLUSION: This surveillance report can be a foundation for discussing ARD. These data support the premise that ARDs primarily occur in persons with a certain demographic and behavior profile that includes middle-aged males exhibiting agitated, bizarre behavior generally following illicit drug abuse. Collapse time associations were demonstrated with the use of TASER devices and impact weapons. We recommend further study in this area to validate our data collection method and findings.
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spelling pubmed-26915152009-06-24 Unexpected Arrest-Related Deaths in America: 12 Months of Open Source Surveillance Ho, Jeffrey D. Heegaard, William G. Dawes, Donald M. Natarajan, Sridhar Reardon, Robert F. Miner, James R. West J Emerg Med Trauma and Injury Prevention INTRODUCTION: Sudden, unexpected arrest-related death (ARD) has been associated with drug abuse, extreme delirium or certain police practices. There is insufficient surveillance and causation data available. We report 12 months of surveillance data using a novel data collection methodology. METHODS: We used an open-source, prospective method to collect 12 consecutive months of data, including demographics, behavior, illicit substance use, control methods used, and time of collapse after law enforcement contact. Descriptive analysis and chi-square testing were applied. RESULTS: There were 162 ARD events reported that met inclusion criteria. The majority were male with mean age 36 years, and involved bizarre, agitated behavior and reports of drug abuse just prior to death. Law enforcement control techniques included none (14%); empty-hand techniques (69%); intermediate weapons such as TASER(®) device, impact weapon or chemical irritant spray (52%); and deadly force (12%). Time from contact to subject collapse included instantaneous (13%), within the first hour (53%) and 1–48 hours (35%). Significant collapse time associations occurred with the use of certain intermediate weapons. CONCLUSION: This surveillance report can be a foundation for discussing ARD. These data support the premise that ARDs primarily occur in persons with a certain demographic and behavior profile that includes middle-aged males exhibiting agitated, bizarre behavior generally following illicit drug abuse. Collapse time associations were demonstrated with the use of TASER devices and impact weapons. We recommend further study in this area to validate our data collection method and findings. Department of Emergency Medicine, University of California, Irvine School of Medicine 2009-05 /pmc/articles/PMC2691515/ /pubmed/19561821 Text en Copyright © 2009 the authors. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0 This is an open access article distributed in accordance with the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY 4.0) License. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/.
spellingShingle Trauma and Injury Prevention
Ho, Jeffrey D.
Heegaard, William G.
Dawes, Donald M.
Natarajan, Sridhar
Reardon, Robert F.
Miner, James R.
Unexpected Arrest-Related Deaths in America: 12 Months of Open Source Surveillance
title Unexpected Arrest-Related Deaths in America: 12 Months of Open Source Surveillance
title_full Unexpected Arrest-Related Deaths in America: 12 Months of Open Source Surveillance
title_fullStr Unexpected Arrest-Related Deaths in America: 12 Months of Open Source Surveillance
title_full_unstemmed Unexpected Arrest-Related Deaths in America: 12 Months of Open Source Surveillance
title_short Unexpected Arrest-Related Deaths in America: 12 Months of Open Source Surveillance
title_sort unexpected arrest-related deaths in america: 12 months of open source surveillance
topic Trauma and Injury Prevention
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2691515/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19561821
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