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Fall in violence hailed

by Mark Rowe

Numbers of people injured in serious violence dropped by 10 per cent in 2014 compared to 2013, according to an England and Wales study, by Cardiff University.

The data was gathered from a sample of 117 EDs, MIUs and Walk-in Centres in England and Wales. All are certified members of the National Violence Surveillance Network (NVSN), which has published an annual report for the past 15 years. Lead author of the study and Director of the Violence Research Group at Cardiff University, Professor Jonathan Shepherd, said: “Our study demonstrates a substantial decrease in violence-related injuries for both men and women in 2014 compared to 2013. Since 2010, we have identified a decline of over 30 per cent in people needing treatment in Emergency Departments after violence.

“Most encouraging is that attacks against children and adolescents are down by nearly a fifth. This trend could be attributed to a number of things from improved child safeguarding policies in the wake of the ‘Baby P’ tragedy to increased information sharing on community violence between the NHS, police and local government.

“These substantial year-on-year decreases in serious violence are welcome news for citizens and communities across England and Wales. Moreover, costs imposed on health services and the criminal justice system by violence have been substantially reduced along with burdens on stretched Emergency Departments.

“And yet it isn’t all good news; our findings suggest that the issue of alcohol-related violence endures, with violence-related Emergency Department attendance consistently at its highest levels on weekends. As we emerge from the economic downturn we must ensure that the affordability of alcohol does not increase. Over 200,000 people across England and Wales going to Emergency Departments with injuries caused by violence are still far too many.”

The findings confirmed the demographic that those most at risk of serious violence-related injury continue to be men, aged 18 aged 30. Overall, apart from a 7pc increase in 2008, there have been decreases in every year since 2001, according to this measure.

Methods used to compile the report and findings in previous years have all been subject to peer review and have been published in the Journal of Public Health and in the journal, Injury.

Meanwhile Professor Martin Innes of Cardiff’s Police Science Institute and the university’s new Crime and Security Research Institute was among speakers at a ‘Campaign for Social Science‘ roadshow that was visiting UK universities before the general election, which called at Cardiff on April 17.

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