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Violence in the community—a study of violence and aggression in homelessness and mental health day services

✍ Scribed by Ian Gilders


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1997
Tongue
English
Weight
217 KB
Volume
7
Category
Article
ISSN
1052-9284

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


This study examined violence and aggression in five agencies providing day services in homelessness or mental health. Incident reporting was used to test the hypotheses that aggression is associated with alcohol problems, drug use, mental disorder, homelessness, history of violence, age and sex. Agency policies and patterns to aggressive incidents were explored. Three agencies provided a sufficient number of incidents for analysis (involving 30 `aggressors'). A history of violence was associated with aggression in all three agencies; alcohol problems, drug use and younger age were associated with aggression in at least one agency; no association was found for mental disorder, homelessness or sex. A degree of pattern to incidents could be discerned, with drink or drugs often involved, and exercises of authority or intervention in client altercations being particularly likely to precede aggression towards staff. A variety of incidents were reported, from verbal arguments to threats with a knife and serious physical assault.


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