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Elevated Prevalence of Suicide Attempts among Victims of Police Violence in the USA
Authors:Jordan E. DeVylder  Jodi J. Frey  Courtney D. Cogburn  Holly C. Wilcox  Tanya L. Sharpe  Hans Y. Oh  Boyoung Nam  Bruce G. Link
Affiliation:1.School of Social Work,University of Maryland, Baltimore,Baltimore,USA;2.School of Social Work,Columbia University,New York,USA;3.Schools of Medicine and Public Health,Johns Hopkins University,Baltimore,USA;4.School of Public Health,University of California, Berkeley,Berkeley,USA;5.School of Public Policy,University of California, Riverside,Riverside,USA
Abstract:Recent evidence suggests that police victimization is widespread in the USA and psychologically impactful. We hypothesized that civilian-reported police victimization, particularly assaultive victimization (i.e., physical/sexual), would be associated with a greater prevalence of suicide attempts and suicidal ideation. Data were drawn from the Survey of Police-Public Encounters, a population-based survey of adults (N = 1615) residing in four US cities. Surveys assessed lifetime exposure to police victimization based on the World Health Organization domains of violence (i.e., physical, sexual, psychological, and neglect), using the Police Practices Inventory. Logistic regression models tested for associations between police victimization and (1) past 12-month suicide attempts and (2) past 12-month suicidal ideation, adjusted for demographic factors (i.e., gender, sexual orientation, race/ethnicity, income), crime involvement, past intimate partner and sexual victimization exposure, and lifetime mental illness. Police victimization was associated with suicide attempts but not suicidal ideation in adjusted analyses. Specifically, odds of attempts were greatly increased for respondents reporting assaultive forms of victimization, including physical victimization (odds ratio = 4.5), physical victimization with a weapon (odds ratio = 10.7), and sexual victimization (odds ratio = 10.2). Assessing for police victimization and other violence exposures may be a useful component of suicide risk screening in urban US settings. Further, community-based efforts should be made to reduce the prevalence of exposure to police victimization.
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