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Maryland Violent Death Reporting System (MVDRS): Using Data to Tell Victims’ Stories Thomas Manion, M.A. Project Coordinator, MVDRS Maryland Department of Health and Mental Hygiene
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A “National” System for Violence Prevention 2002 – Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Public health approach to violence prevention National system with state-level components Five states funded initially (including Maryland)
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Currently Funded States
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Maryland’s System: MVDRS Maryland Department of Health and Mental Hygiene First Data Collection Year: 2003 Data available through 2010
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MVDRS Mission: 1.Maintain detailed body of information on Maryland violent deaths 2.Promote greater scientific understanding of violence 3.Encourage the development of effective violent death prevention and intervention strategies
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What constitutes a violent death? “A death resulting from the intentional use of physical force or power* against oneself, another person, or group.” *Includes poisons/drugs
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Homicide Suicide Death of Undetermined Intent Accidental (ONLY if firearm-related) Manners of Death Evaluated As ruled by the Office of the Chief Medical Examiner for Maryland
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Where does our data come from? Medical Examiner Reports (OCME) Police Reports (State and Local Law Enforcement) Death Certificates (MD Vital Statistics) MVDRS
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Data Collected Victim/Suspect demographics Victim/Suspect relationship (if applicable) Victim’s marital status, education, current occupation Time, date, location of injury Weapon and wound details Toxicology Precipitating Circumstances Narratives MVDRS Database
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What sets MVDRS data apart? Unprecedented level of detail Precipitating circumstances In-depth narratives
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Our Philosophy on Violent Death 1.) Every victim has a story 2.) Prevention should be grounded in scientific research
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Stories Trends Prevention Data
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Limitations NO data on Maryland residents injured out of state Data Collection Timeline 1-2 year lag between death and inclusion in MVDRS
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MVDRS Data Highlights * 2010 *All rates are crude rates per 100,000 population
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1,427 violent deaths = 24.7 per 100,000 Male rate (39) more than triple the female rate (11.3) Age 25-29 had the highest age-specific rate (44.5) Violent Death Overview
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Manner of Death
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389 deaths = 6.7 per 100,000 Homicide Overview Nearly half of victims were Baltimore residents Nearly 80% of homicide victims were black Most common location of injury was a street/sidewalk/alley (40.6%)
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Homicide: Residential County
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Homicide: Cause of Death
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Most common precipitating circumstances: Argument/Conflict Precipitated by another crime Drug involvement Intimate partner violence Homicide : Circumstantial Data
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481 deaths = 8.3 per 100,000 Age groups with the highest rates were 45-54 (13.7), 75-84 (11.2) and 55-64 (11.2) Harford County had the highest suicide rate (11.4) Veterans accounted for nearly 18% of suicides (all males) Suicide Overview
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Suicide: Injury Location
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Suicide: Cause of Death
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Most common precipitating circumstances: Current mental health diagnosis Disclosed intent/suicidal ideations Intimate partner problem Physical health problem Job problem Financial problem Suicide: Circumstantial Data
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Only 55% of victims with a current mental health diagnosis were currently being treated Female victims were significantly more likely than males to have a history of suicide attempts (37.8% vs 18.6%) 35.7% of victims left a suicide note Suicide: Circumstantial Data
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Recent Publication Suicidology Online, vol. 3, pp. 131-137 Comparison of Maryland suicide deaths by victim age Cumulative data 2003-2009
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Recent Publication Four Age Groups: Youth (19 and younger) Young Adult (20-34) Middle Aged (35-64) Elder (65 and older)
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Conclusions MVDRS as a source of violent death data Circumstances, special populations Focused prevention efforts By Age?
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Thomas Manion Project Coordinator Maryland Violent Death Reporting System Maryland Department of Health and Mental Hygiene Thomas.Manion@maryland.gov 410-767-5744
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