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Public Health Approach to Violence Prevention and Treatment

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Title: Public Health Approach to Violence Prevention and Treatment


1
Public Health Approach to Violence Prevention and
Treatment
  • Assoc. Prof. Dr. F. Nur AKSAKAL
  • Gazi University Faculty of Medicine
  • Department of Public Health
  • World Public Health Congress,
  • 29.04.2009
  • Istanbul

2
Content
Violence- definition, burden, facts
Typology of violence
The public health approach to violence prevention
Recommendations
Conclusion
3
"I have something in my eye"
  • " More than 800 people die every day as a direct
    result of violent conflict more than 30 deaths
    each hour. "

4
" I was scratched by the cat"
  • "Every 40 seconds 1 person commits suicide
    somewhere in the world."

5
"I ran into the door"
  • "1 in 4 women experience sexual abuse by an
    intimate partner in their lifetime."

6
"I enjoy spending my days alone"
  • "1 in 20 older people experience some form of
    abuse in their home."

7
"I fell down the stairs"
  • "1 in 2 female murder victims are killed by their
    male partners, often during an ongoing abusive
    relationship."

8
"I fell out of my cradle"
  • "Millions of children suffer abuse and neglect at
    the hands of their parents and other caregivers."

9
"I got kicked playing football"
  • "More than 540 adolescents and young adults die
    every day as a result of interpersonal violence
    more than 20 deaths occur each hour."

10
"I'm playing hide and seek"
  • "More than 800 people die every day as a direct
    result of violent conflict more than 30 deaths
    each hour."

11
What is public health problem?
  • Common
  • Effecting many people
  • Causing considerable number of deaths and/or
    disabilities
  • Causing economic loss
  • Mostly preventable.

12
Violence Problem
  • Violence is a public health problem which needs
    to be adressed in depth

13
Violence- Definition (WHO)
  • Violence is the intentional use of physical
    force or power, threatened or actual, against
    oneself, another person, or against a group or
    community, which either results in or has a high
    likelihood of resulting in injury, death,
    psychological harm, maldevelopment, or
    deprivation.

14
Violence- Burden
  • Each year, over 1.6 million people worldwide lose
    their lives to violence
  • Violence and injuries account for 9 of global
    mortality ( 5 million deaths every year)
  • Leading cause of death among 15-44 years
  • As many deaths as from HIV malaria tbc
  • Eight of the 15 leading causes of death for
    people ages 15 to 29 years are injury-related
    road traffic injuries, suicides, homicides,
    drownings, burns, war injuries, poisonings and
    falls.

15
Violence- Facts
  • For every person who dies as a result of
    violence, many more are injured and suffer from a
    range of physical, sexual, reproductive and
    mental health problems.
  • A massive burden on national economies (billions
    of USD each year in health care, law enforcement
    and lost productivity.)

16
Violence
  • FALSE
  • Violence is inevitable part of human condition
  • Prevention is the responsibility of the criminal
    justice system
  • Principle role of health sector is the care and
    rehabilitation of the victims only
  • TRUE
  • Violence has root
  • causes of complex conditions
  • Health sector has more to do
  • Prevention is a multisectorial collaborative task
  • Public health response does not replace criminal
    justice and human rights rather complements their
    activities, offers additional tools and sources
    of collaboration

17
  • Social norms that create a climate in which
    violence is encouraged or inhibited (health,
    economic, educational policies..)

Societal
Violence- Roots
  • Social relationship -schools, workplace,
    neighbourhoods (poverty, high population density,
    high levels of residential mobility, low social
    capital)

Community
  • With families, friends, intimate partners, peers
    (harsh physical punishment of children, lack of
    affection and bonding, family dysfunction,
    marital/parental conflict)

Relationship
  • Biological (age,sex) or personal
    (education,income)
  • Psychological or personality disorders (substance
    abuse, aggressive behaviour or experience of
    abuse)

Individual
18
Violence- Typology
who has committed the act
e.g. Intimate partner violence
who victims are
e.g. Child maltreatment
Typology
kind of violence subjected
e.g. Sexual violence
19
Violence- Typology
Inter-personal violence
e.g. Youth violence Intimate partner violence
Self- targeted
e.g. Suicide and self-harm
Typology
Collective
e.g. Youth violence
20
Gender-based violance
  • Gender-based violence, or violence against women
    (VAW), is a major public health and human rights
    problem throughout the world (commonly performed
    by a husband or male partner).
  • Has profound implications for health but is often
    ignored.
  • Frequently invisible since it happens behind
    closed doors,
  • Some legal systems and cultural norms do not
    treat as a crime, but rather as a "private"
    family matter, or a normal part of life.

21
Intimate partner violance
  • physical, sexual, or psychological harm by a
    current or former partner or spouse
  • Four main types
  • Physical
  • Sexual
  • Threats of physical or sexual
  • Psychological / emotional
  • Consequences
  • Physical- burns, pain, wounds, system disorders
  • Psychological- depression, suicidal behaviour,
    anxiety
  • Social- restricted access to services, isolation
    from social networks
  • Health behaviours- unprotected sex, early sexual
    initiation, alcohol-cigarette, illicate drug use

22
Sexual violance
  • any sexual act (physical,verbal or
    psychological) that is forced against someone's
    will
  • Four main types
  • A completed sex act
  • An attempted (but not completed) sex act
  • Abusive sexual contact
  • Non-contact sexual abuse
  • Consequences
  • Physical- unwanted pregnancy, chronic pelvic
    pain
  • Psychological- Shock, denial, fear, confusion,
    anxiety, depression
  • Social- Strained relationships with the victim's
    family, friends, and intimate partners, less
    frequent contact with friends and relatives
  • Health behaviours- Engaging in high-risk sexual
    behavior, unprotected sex, early sexual
    initiation, using harmful substances

23
Suicide and self-harm
  • Suicidal behavior exists along a continuum from
    thinking about ending ones life (suicidal
    ideation), to developing a plan, to non-fatal
    suicidal behavior (suicide attempt), to ending
    ones life (suicide).
  • Four main types
  • Suicidal ideation
  • Suicide attempt
  • Suicide
  • Consequences
  • Physical- death, injury
  • High cost

24
Youth violence
  • "the intentional use of physical force or power,
    threatened or actual, against another person or
    against a group or community that results in or
    has a high likelihood of resulting in injury,
    death, psychological harm, maldevelopment, or
    deprivation" (Dahlberg and Krug 2002).
  • Types
  • includes all acts of violence,
  • public or private, reactive, proactive
  • criminal or noncriminal.
  • Consequences
  • Physical- death, injury
  • Social- Strained relationships with the victim's
    family, friends, and intimate partners, less
    frequent contact with relatives
  • Health behaviours- Engaging in high-risk
    behavior, using harmful substances

25
Child maltreatment
  • " all forms of physical and emotional
    ill-treatment, sexual abuse, neglect, and
    exploitation that results in actual or potential
    harm to the childs health, development or
    dignity "
  • Five main types
  • physical abuse
  • sexual abuse
  • neglect and negligent treatment
  • emotional abuse
  • exploitation.
  • Consequences
  • Physical- noncommunicable diseases, death, injury
  • Psychological- psychiatric disorders and suicide,
    and has lifelong sequelae including depression,
    anxiety disorders
  • Health behaviours- smoking, alcohol and drug
    abuse, aggression and violence towards others,
    risky sexual behaviours and post traumatic stress
    disorders

26
Public health approach to violence prevention and
treatment
4
  • A four-steps process

3
Assure widespread adoption
2
Develop and test prevention strategies
1
Identify risk and protective factors
Define the problem
27
1. Define the problem
  • Understanding the violence
  • Analyzing data
  • number of violence-related behaviours, injuries,
    deaths
  • How frequent, where, trends
  • Who are the victims?
  • Who are the perpetrators?
  • Data source Police records, vital records,
    population-based surveys
  • Establishing surveillance systems
  • Primary health care level,
  • secondary health care level,
  • first-aid or hospital emergency level

28
2. Identify risk and protective factors
  • Understand what factors protect people or put
    them at risk for experiencing or perpetrating
    violence
  • Risk factors point out where protective efforts
    point out
  • Risk factors do not cause violence
    (risk?violence)
  • Protective factors act as a buffer (improvement
    of social environment, decreasing inequalities,
    education)

29
3. Develop and test prevention strategies
  • Evidence-based approach to program planning
  • Research data and findings from
  • Needs assessment
  • Community surveys
  • Stakeholder interviews
  • Focus groups

30
4. Assure wide-spread adoption
  • Involvement of governments and public
  • and private partners
  • Political commitment
  • Population based training and monitoring
    programmes
  • Improving services for victims and survivors

31
Public Health Interventions
Addressing individual risk factors
Increase access to means to reduce homicide and
suicide
Address gender inequality
32
Violence -experience
  • It is often predictable and preventable
  • Upstream investment brings downstream results
  • Resources should be focused on the most
    vulnerable groups
  • Political commitment to tackling violence is
    vital to the public health effort

33
Recommendations for action-1
  • Create, implement and monitor a
  • national action plan for violence prevention
  • Enhance capacity for collecting data on violence
  • Define priorities for, and support research on,
    the causes, consequences, costs and prevention of
    violence
  • Promote primary prevention responses
  • Strengthen responses for victims of violence

34
Recommendations for action-2
  • Integrate violence prevention into social and
    educational policies, and thereby promote gender
    and social equality
  • Increase collaboration and exchange of
    information on violence prevention
  • Promote and monitor adherence to international
    treaties, laws and other mechanisms to protect
    human rights
  • Seek practical, internationally agreed responses
    to the global drugs trade and the global arms
    trade

35
Conclusion
  • There is a profound data in some but scarce data
    in other countries

36
Conclusion
Violence is mostly hidden but not inevitable
There is a profound data in some but scarce data
in other countries
A number of initiatives are launched
There is a need for increased cooperation,
innovation and commitment to preventing violence
around the world
37
The posters, prepared by Fabrica, the renowned
creative design company based in Venice, Italy,
serve as visual support to the awareness-raising
Global Campaign for Violence Prevention and the
World report on violence and health. WHO
38
Thank You...
  • nuraksakal_at_gmail.com
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