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      Fatalities related to intimate partner violence: towards a comprehensive perspective

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          Abstract

          Background

          In 2015, 1350 people in the US were killed by their current or former intimate partner. Intimate partner violence (IPV) can also fatally injure family members or friends, and IPV may be a risk factor for suicide. Without accounting for all these outcomes, policymakers, funders, researchers and public health practitioners may underestimate the role that IPV plays in violent death.

          Objective

          We sought to enumerate the total contribution of IPV to violent death. Currently, no data holistically report on this problem.

          Methods

          We used Violent Death Reporting System (VDRS) data to identify all IPV-related violent deaths in North Carolina, 2010–2017. These included intimate partner homicides, corollary deaths, homicide-suicides, single suicides and legal intervention deaths. We used the existing IPV variable in VDRS, linked deaths from the same incident and manually reviewed 2440 suicide narratives where intimate partner problems or stalking were a factor in the death.

          Results

          IPV contributes to more than 1 in 10 violent deaths (10.3%). This represents an age-adjusted rate of 1.97 per 100 000 persons. Of the IPV-related violent deaths we identified, 39.3% were victims of intimate partner homicide, 17.4% corollary victims, 11.4% suicides in a homicide-suicide event, 29.8% suicides in a suicide-only event and 2.0% legal intervention deaths.

          Implications

          If researchers only include intimate partner homicides, they may miss over 60% of IPV-related deaths. Our novel study shows the importance of taking a comprehensive approach to prevent IPV and decrease violent deaths. IPV is a risk factor for suicide as well as homicide.

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          Author and article information

          Contributors
          (View ORCID Profile)
          (View ORCID Profile)
          Journal
          Injury Prevention
          Inj Prev
          BMJ
          1353-8047
          1475-5785
          August 24 2020
          : injuryprev-2020-043704
          Article
          10.1136/injuryprev-2020-043704
          32839248
          6b1022c1-29e1-4793-9e1a-2112c89bb208
          © 2020
          History

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