Violence reduction, revisiting a public health approach
Kane, Eddie ; Cattell, Jack ; Durcan, Graham
Kane, Eddie
Cattell, Jack
Durcan, Graham
Abstract
Objectives Propose and test an alternative method for identifying population targets for public health model derived violence reduction programmes. Study design Quantitative and qualitative focused on neighbourhoods in the 75th percentile of violence or higher, using Lower Super Output Areas (LSOAs) as the data collection/integration focus. Methods Cluster analysis to group similar LSOAs together. Significant factors in the regression analysis plus violence rates were entered into a k-means cluster analysis creating five groupings and a short list to include in the quantitative and qualitative arms. Results Local Government Area (LGA) or a city-wide perspective, masks locations with high violence rates and misses potential solutions. Crime and violence are more prevalent in areas with high deprivation, poor design of housing and space associated with isolation and fear. Less considered violence vectors were identified. Conclusions Deprivation was the strongest predictor of violence, but there are highly deprived areas that do not have high levels of violence and conversely high-violence neighbourhoods in non-deprived areas. A granular and dynamic understanding of these patterns should form the basis of future investment and intervention efforts.
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Date
2025
Type
Article
Subject
Violence, Public health
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Citation
Kane, E., Cattell, J., Durcan, G. & Parry, J. (2025). Violence reduction, revisiting a public health approach. Public Health, 247, pp.105871.
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DOI
PMID
Publisher
Elsevier
