comparemela.com

Latest Breaking News On - Violence criminals - Page 7 : comparemela.com

Association between COVID-19 lockdown measures, ED visits for violence-related injuries in Wales

This study investigates emergency department visits for violence-related injuries occurring at home and outside the home in Cardiff, Wales, before and after COVID-19 lockdown measures were instituted in March 2020.

What-the-study-did
Security-research-institute
Cardiff-university
For-the-media
Medicine-health
Critical-care-emergency-medicine
Infectious-emerging-diseases
Pulmonary-respiratory-medicine
Trauma-injury
Developing-countries
Violence-criminals

Walking away from the beat - why police officers are voluntarily leaving in large numbers

 E-Mail Home Office data shows the number of police officers voluntarily resigning from the force in England and Wales has more than doubled in the last eight years. Scant attention has been paid to the reason for this mass exodus. Until now. Researchers from the University of Portsmouth studied government statistics, and discovered the numbers of officers voluntarily resigning from the police service is rising - from 1,158 in the year ending March 2012 to 2,363 in the year ending March 2020. The figure amounts to 1.83 per cent of the total police officer population in England and Wales up from 0.86 per cent eight years ago.

United-kingdom
Emma-gaisford
Home-office
University-of-portsmouth
Institute-of-criminal-justice
Sarah-charman
Criminal-justice-studies
Teaching-excellence-framework
Times-higher-education
Media-officer
Social-behavioral-science
Violence-criminals

Slutpage visits may be common among US college students

 E-Mail Visits to digital groups, websites or email lists that share nude or semi-nude photos of women without their consent, known as slutpages, may be common among US college students, according to a survey conducted at a large university in the USA. The findings, published in the journal Archives of Sexual Behavior, could help inform sexual violence prevention education offered by universities, according to the authors. Researchers at Michigan State University, USA found that one in three US college students may be viewing slutpages, based on a study of student behaviour at a large US university. One in ten participants reported using a secret photo storing app to store or share nude images, and one in 30 reported posting nude images or videos online without consent. Younger and male participants were found to be more likely than older or female participants to engage in any of these behaviours.

United-states
Megan-maas
Slutpage-use-among-us-college-students
Researchers-at-michigan-state-university
International-academy-of-sex-research
Sexual-behavior
Michigan-state-university
Social-platforms
Image-based-sexual
International-academy
Sex-research
Social-behavioral-science

The Lancet Public Health: Jail incarceration strongly linked with several causes of premature death in US counties /p

County jail incarceration rates in the USA are potential drivers of many causes of death in the communities where they are located, with particularly pronounced effects on the number of deaths caused by infectious and respiratory diseases, drug overdose, and suicide, according to a long-term analysis of jail incarceration and county-level mortality across 1,094 counties between 1987 and 2017, published in The Lancet Public Health journal.

United-states
Americans
Sethj-prins
Abdul-el-sayed
Wayne-state-university
Academy-of-medical-sciences
Vera-institute-of-justice
Detroit-wayne-state-university
Lancet-public-health
Us-national-vital-statistics-system
Us-national-institute-on-drug-abuse
Columbia-university-mailman-school-of-public-health

Increased green space in prisons can reduce self-harm and violence

 E-Mail Prisons with more green space have lower levels of violence and self-harm, according to new research at the University of Birmingham and Utrecht University. The study is the first to attempt large-scale mapping of green space within prison environments and link it to well-being in a robust, statistically significant way. The results are published in Annals of the American Association of Geographers. The researchers used GIS mapping to identify the percentages of green space (such as trees, lawns and shrubbery) within prisons in England and Wales. They compared this with available data about incidents of self-harm, prisoner assaults on staff and violence between prisoners. They also drew on information about the age and function of individual establishments - for example their capacity, what the security level was, whether they accommodated men, women or young offenders, and whether they were purpose-built prisons, or converted from other types of buildings such as milit

United-states
Netherlands
Utrecht
United-kingdom
American
Amy-porter
Jacob-jordaan
Phil-jones
Dominique-moran
Environmental-sciences
University-of-utrecht
Annals-of-the-american-association-geographers

© 2024 Vimarsana

vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.