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1 and 13% for injuries (accident, suicide, or homicide).
2 r unnatural causes (suicides, accidents, and homicides).
3 o infectious diseases, chronic diseases, and homicide.
4 l illness, are at increased risk of death by homicide.
5 Risk of death of a worker due to homicide.
6 nificantly associated with decreased odds of homicide.
7 timing of deaths and risk factors for infant homicide.
8 at the time of each index case participant's homicide.
9 s) who were both outdoors at the time of the homicide.
10 surroundings were associated with adolescent homicide.
11 ffending or severe violent behavior, such as homicide.
12 s greater than the risk of being a victim of homicide.
13 or completed suicide and being the victim of homicide.
14 and regional prevalence of intimate partner homicide.
15 sion in approximately one third of all child homicides.
16 ntentional injuries, 1,248 suicides, and 349 homicides.
17 vealed significant law effects on nonfirearm homicides.
18 otal of 175 firearm suicides and 524 firearm homicides.
19 tion of other lethal methods for suicides or homicides.
20 ths as unintentional injuries, suicides, and homicides.
21 ity, might lower the rate of firearm-induced homicides.
22 y promotes the occurrence of firearm-induced homicides.
23 hs were attributable to suicide, 352 (5%) to homicide, 1100 (17%) to accidental injuries, and the int
24 : 632 (95% CI 517-773) and 609 (493-753) for homicide, 1356 (1322-1391) and 1212 (1184-1241) for suic
29 come countries (all, 14.9%, 9.2-18.2; female homicide, 41.2%, 30.8-44.5) and in southeast Asia (18.8%
31 9%, -0.04 to 1.02), and with a 0.79% rise in homicides (95% CI 0.06-1.52; 3-80 potential excess death
32 s (suicide, drug-related or alcohol-related, homicide, accidental, and other causes of death) up to 1
33 juries, motor vehicle crashes, suicides, and homicides) accounted for 32.8% of the decline in life ex
34 treatment during the 3 months preceding the homicide; African Americans were less likely than non-Af
36 he risks of drug-related death, suicide, and homicide after release from New York City jails in 155,2
48 e alcohol and illicit drug use are common in homicide and suicide victims, the role of chronic substa
49 for the years 2008-10 (stratified by intent [homicide and suicide]) from the US Centers for Disease C
50 rkers were different: Numbers of deaths from homicide and unintentional trauma were equal, and 27% of
51 ent trends in homicide rates by mechanism of homicide and urbanization group have not been described.
52 heless, annually, there are more than 16,000 homicides and 1.6 million nonfatal assault injuries requ
54 xogenous variation in the relative timing of homicides and interview assessments among children in th
56 =21 years and >/=55 years) and proportion of homicides and suicides resulting from firearms were calc
58 ds of rates of total firearm deaths, firearm homicides and suicides, and total homicides and suicides
59 d homicide-suicides as a percentage of total homicides and total suicides separately were calculated
60 destruction by autoimmune attack (beta-cell homicide) and beta-cell apoptosis by endoplasmic reticul
64 ied 15- to 34-year-old victims of accidents, homicides, and suicides were graded according to the Ame
71 ies, particularly road traffic accidents and homicides, are the main health challenge for young adult
72 ted mechanism of death (P=0.001) and to have homicide as the listed circumstance of death (P=0.001).
74 crime (actions resulting in convictions for homicide, assault, robbery, arson, any sexual offense, i
75 Violent crime (any criminal conviction for homicide, assault, robbery, arson, any sexual offense, i
76 he model estimated a 15% increase in firearm homicides associated with the Saturday night special ban
78 s were defined as deaths due to accidents or homicide at the workplace, and populations at risk were
81 ad injury and that the manner of death was a homicide, (b) at least one CML was evident at skeletal s
82 or victims and perpetrators of all confirmed homicides between Jan 1, 2003, and Dec 31, 2005, in Engl
83 art disease, stroke, cardiovascular disease, homicide, bipolar disorder, and major and postpartum dep
84 arly faced such adaptive problems (including homicide, bodily harm, theft, mate poaching, cuckoldry,
85 also at greater risk of dying from a firearm homicide, but risk varied by age and whether the person
86 tional Confidential Inquiry into Suicide and Homicide by People with Mental Illness and from the Ment
87 tional Confidential Inquiry into Suicide and Homicide by People with Mental Illness for England and W
88 tional Confidential Inquiry into Suicide and Homicide by People with Mental Illness, on behalf of NHS
91 for the causal impact of waiting periods on homicides by exploiting a natural experiment resulting f
92 globally, but evidence for the magnitude of homicides by intimate partners is scarce and hampered by
93 ional Confidential Inquiry into Suicides and Homicides by People with Mental Illness, which includes
100 annual rate of total nonfirearm suicide and homicide deaths was 10.6 (95% CI, 10.0-11.2) per 100,000
101 and 1999, the rate of single-victim student homicides decreased significantly (P =.03); however, hom
102 mental disorders in an unselected sample of homicide defendants in a U.S. jurisdiction, seeking to i
107 ble to death from unnatural causes, notably, homicide during childhood and suicide in early adulthood
108 s from external causes (accidents, injuries, homicides, etc.) for persons with developmental disabili
110 firearm laws with overall firearm mortality, homicide firearm mortality, and suicide firearm mortalit
111 40 were natural; the other six were probable homicides, five committed by one or both parents (two cr
114 lustrate this, the author examines a case of homicide for which the defense argued lack of responsibi
119 dings in the context of evidence about child homicide in different countries, and consider etiology a
120 We found no evidence of increased risk of homicide in exposed young adults, but this group had a 2
121 borhood, the risks of drug-related death and homicide in formerly incarcerated persons were 2 times h
122 We recorded an increased risk of dying by homicide in men with schizophrenia and in individuals wi
123 he strongest results show that exposure to a homicide in the block group that occurs less than a week
124 ose without guns in the home of dying from a homicide in the home (adjusted odds ratio = 1.9, 95% con
126 cal characteristics of 16 women charged with homicide in the United States after alleged neonaticides
128 highest observed relative risk (RR) was for homicide in young and older children with affected mothe
132 ignificant underascertainment of child abuse homicides in vital records systems persists despite grea
134 4 years old by race whose cause of death was homicide (International Classification of Diseases, Nint
138 atients with mental illness being victims of homicide is an important antistigma message, although th
140 ss; overall, the risk of patients committing homicide is greater than the risk of being a victim of h
146 nal causes, such as unintentional injury and homicide, may be higher among twins and higher-order mul
149 regression models confirmed that the rise of homicide mortality in both men and women was largely att
152 entional overdoses (n = 85), and a subset of homicides (n = 4638) and fatalities from motor vehicle c
153 ined (change = -0.05; Ptrend < 0.0001) while homicide NFIs increased (change = 0.43; Ptrend < 0.0001)
154 encouraging and consistent with declines in homicide, nonfatal victimization, and school crime rates
158 with alcohol users were at increased risk of homicide (odds ratio, 1.7; 95% confidence interval, 0.98
159 drug users were at greatly increased risk of homicide (odds ratio, 11.3; 95% confidence interval, 4.4
162 ates the acute effect of exposure to a local homicide on the cognitive performance of children across
164 uring any of the 3 time periods, with either homicide or Black FFR-population subsets accounting for
167 arly age was strongly associated with infant homicide, particularly if the mother had given birth pre
170 commented on their risk of being victims of homicide; public concern is pre-occupied with their role
174 ative scenarios can minimize the gun-related homicide rate: a ban of private firearms possession, or
175 987 through 1991, the average annual firearm homicide rates among persons 15 through 24 years old amo
177 ncreasing since 1987, firearm and nonfirearm homicide rates began declining between 1993 and 1995 amo
178 between 1993 and 1994, but recent trends in homicide rates by mechanism of homicide and urbanization
180 ased, and from 1990 through 1995, nonfirearm homicide rates declined in all 5 strata, on average 3.7%
183 rrupted time-series analysis of age-adjusted homicide rates for 1975-1998 with statistical controls f
184 2013, firearm export rates, and non-firearm homicide rates for 2009, and unemployment rates for 2010
188 s decreased significantly (P =.03); however, homicide rates for students killed in multiple-victim ev
191 at least in the context of the decline in US homicide rates since 1991, to which demographic and econ
192 riables, and temporal patterns in Maryland's homicide rates was used to assess the effect of the law.
193 n produced estimates indicating that firearm homicide rates were 6.8-11.5% lower than would have been
195 se in their family home or group homes, with homicides rates being three times higher and pedestrian
196 n average increment of 135% in the number of homicides, rather than the expected isometric increase o
197 as not statistically significant for firearm homicide (ratio of trends, 0.975; 95% CI, 0.949-1.001).
199 g a longitudinal sample of 466 residents and homicide records from the Office of the Public Prosecuto
202 To identify workplace-level predictors of homicide risk, a case-control study of worker killings i
203 The concept of the individual at risk of homicide should be broadened to include not only the abu
204 ence of physical illness, suicide, violence, homicide, significant immunosuppression, and mortality f
206 -cause, natural, unintentional, suicide, and homicide); social health outcomes; and health care use.
208 rectly standardised rate ratios for death by homicide, suicide, and accident in people admitted to ho
210 velopmental disability were at lower risk of homicide, suicide, and poisonings (standardized mortalit
212 udy was to determine the annual incidence of homicide-suicide and to compare patterns and antecedents
216 link between intimate partner conflicts and homicide-suicide incidents and strategies involving coll
219 mate partner conflicts was even common among homicide-suicide perpetrators who did not victimize thei
221 omicide-followed-by-suicide (referred to as "homicide-suicide") incidents are rare events but can hav
224 ugh psychopathology was strongly implicated, homicide-suicides are violent lethal acts resulting from
225 e incidence rates per 100,000 population and homicide-suicides as a percentage of total homicides and
227 72 were homicides, 30 were suicides, 11 were homicide-suicides, 5 were legal intervention deaths, and
229 ics and how they compare with those of other homicide suspects and suicide decedents might provide in
231 th mental illness were more likely to die by homicide than were people in the general population (inc
232 s proportion was six times higher for female homicides than for male homicides (38.6%, 30.8-45.3, vs
233 le accidents are the most common cause, with homicide the second most common cause of intentional inj
236 rnal cause (such as suicides, accidents, and homicides), there were 114.2 deaths (95 percent confiden
238 ficiency virus infection, cancer, cirrhosis, homicide, transportation, and accidental poisoning) acco
240 Homicide offenders were more likely than homicide victims to have expressed some form of suicidal
241 The median prevalence of intimate partner homicide was calculated by country and region overall, a
247 second in 1983, declined to fourth in 1994, homicide was unchanged, and chronic liver disease declin
248 ntal health services in the 12 months before homicide, we sent questionnaires to the clinician respon
249 male and female) and female intimate partner homicide were highest in high-income countries (all, 14.
255 studies that assessed he odds of suicide or homicide, yielding pooled ORs of 3.24(95% CI, 2.41 to 4.
256 itical care, including child physical abuse, homicide, youth violence, intimate partner violence, sel
257 into eight categories (child physical abuse, homicide, youth violence, intimate partner violence, sel
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