CDC Suspects Upward Trends in Homicides and Suicides
In 2003, homicide increased four percent and suicide increased five percent above 2002 rates in the six reporting states. Homicide rates among males under age 25 increased 18 percent in those states.
According to CDC officials, NVDRS puts them on the front line to collect rapid, reliable data to better inform our prevention strategies. With NVDRS, the CDC can spot early warning trends for violent deaths and modify prevention efforts. Among those warning signs are the role of alcohol and drugs in violent deaths, and how often a homicide is followed by a suicide.
CDC established NVDRS in 2003 to address a crucial gap in understanding national and regional trends in violent deaths by combining relevant records into one repository state-specific data.
The new system may provide states and communities valuable information that can be used to develop and implement tailored violence prevention efforts, say officials at the National Center for Injury Prevention and Control. The data help to identify potential strategies and also allow evaluation of current violence prevention efforts and determine if they are saving lives.
The NVDRS will document the circumstances of suicides and homicides to help identify and evaluate prevention opportunities. Each state collects detailed information about a violent death directly from the records of state health departments, medical examiners and coroners, as well as law enforcement, providing a clearer picture of the circumstances surrounding violent deaths at the national, regional, and state levels. Information such as a history of depression or a family dispute, gang activity, drugs and other circumstances surrounding the violent death are recorded.
Currently, 17 states participate in this state-based surveillance system. The next report expected later this year will include the data from the initial six states as well as seven additional states (Alaska, Colorado, Georgia, Oklahoma, North Carolina, Rhode Island and Wisconsin) which began collecting data in 2004. The final four states (California, Connecticut, Utah and New Mexico) which began data collection in 2005, will not release any data until 2006.
CDC hopes to expand NVDRS to all 50 states so data can be compared across states and regions of the country, and to establish national violence related data.
Sources: Centers for Disease Control, US Department of Health and Human Resources, Federal Bureau of Investigation, New Jersey State Police, American Federation of Police & Concerned Citizens