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The incidence, pathology of trauma and victim profiles of homicidal deaths in Pretoria, South Africa (2007-2008)

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Date

Authors

Cocks, Jeannie
Saayman, Gert

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

SAGE

Abstract

This study aimed to establish the incidence of homicide, associated pathology of trauma and victim profiles in cases admitted to or managed as homicidal deaths at the Pretoria Medico-Legal Laboratory (PMLL) over the period of 2007–2008. A total of 1088 cases were reviewed. Homicides accounted for 22.7% of all cases admitted to the PMLL. The majority of homicide victims were male individuals (87.0%). The most common cause of death was gunshot wounds (42.6%), followed by blunt force trauma (25.1%). Homicides are most likely to occur at the victim's place of residence (28.5%) and only 37.4% of victims survive long enough to receive hospital care. The results of this study seem to concur with international findings for the most part, with a few interesting deviations. Highlighting at-risk groups, as well as dangerous locations and incident times, creates the potential to decrease the occurrence of unnecessary deaths by generating an awareness of the trends.

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Keywords

Incidence, Pathology, Trauma, Victim profiles, Homicidal deaths

Sustainable Development Goals

Citation

Cocks, J & Saayman, G 2013, 'The incidence, pathology of trauma and victim profiles of homicidal deaths in Pretoria, South Africa (2007-2008)', Medicine, Science and the Law, vol. 53, no. 2, pp. 61-66.