Background: General population surveys have seldom examined violence as a multidimensional concept and in relation to an array of mental disorders. Methods: Data from the South East London Community Health Study was used to examine the prevalence, overlap and distribution of proximal witnessed, victimised and perpetrated violence and their association with current mental disorders. We further investigated the cumulative effect of lifetime exposure to violence on current mental disorders. Unadjusted and adjusted (for confounders and violence) models were examined. Results: In the last twelve months, 7.4 % reported witnessing violence, 6.3 % victimisation and 3.2 % perpetration of violence. There was a significant overlap across violence type...
BACKGROUND: Since de-institutionalisation, much has been written about the risk posed to the communi...
Studies that examine the exposure to community violence (CVE) among young adults in developing count...
BACKGROUND: Reliance on national figures may be underestimating the extent of mental ill health in u...
BACKGROUND: General population surveys have seldom examined violence as a multidimensional concept a...
General population surveys have seldom examined violence as a multidimensional concept and in relati...
Objective: Studies conducted in large metropolitan inner-city communities with high violent crime ra...
BACKGROUND: The public perception that mental disorder is strongly associated with violence drives b...
PURPOSE: To establish the prevalence of victimisation in a UK population-based sample and to investi...
Background: It is unclear whether psychiatric morbidity contributes to the small proportion of the ...
Few studies have been published on the association between mental disorders and violence based on ge...
This mixed methods study investigated the experiences of victimisation among people with mental heal...
Purpose: Fear of crime and perceived neighbourhood disorder have been linked to common mental illnes...
OBJECTIVE: This study examined the relationship between violence and substance abuse among patients ...
There is a lack of agreement on whether children and adolescents with different cultural/ethnic back...
OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to establish the prevalence and predictors of violent victimiza...
BACKGROUND: Since de-institutionalisation, much has been written about the risk posed to the communi...
Studies that examine the exposure to community violence (CVE) among young adults in developing count...
BACKGROUND: Reliance on national figures may be underestimating the extent of mental ill health in u...
BACKGROUND: General population surveys have seldom examined violence as a multidimensional concept a...
General population surveys have seldom examined violence as a multidimensional concept and in relati...
Objective: Studies conducted in large metropolitan inner-city communities with high violent crime ra...
BACKGROUND: The public perception that mental disorder is strongly associated with violence drives b...
PURPOSE: To establish the prevalence of victimisation in a UK population-based sample and to investi...
Background: It is unclear whether psychiatric morbidity contributes to the small proportion of the ...
Few studies have been published on the association between mental disorders and violence based on ge...
This mixed methods study investigated the experiences of victimisation among people with mental heal...
Purpose: Fear of crime and perceived neighbourhood disorder have been linked to common mental illnes...
OBJECTIVE: This study examined the relationship between violence and substance abuse among patients ...
There is a lack of agreement on whether children and adolescents with different cultural/ethnic back...
OBJECTIVE: The aim of this study was to establish the prevalence and predictors of violent victimiza...
BACKGROUND: Since de-institutionalisation, much has been written about the risk posed to the communi...
Studies that examine the exposure to community violence (CVE) among young adults in developing count...
BACKGROUND: Reliance on national figures may be underestimating the extent of mental ill health in u...