TY - JOUR PY - 2005// TI - Intentional injury and the behavioral syndrome JO - Aggression and violent behavior A1 - Mawson, Anthony R. A1 - Mawson, Anthony R SP - 375 EP - 405 VL - 10 IS - 3 N2 - Injuries are currently classified as intentional or unintentional. Worldwide, intentional injury accounts for about 4400 deaths per day, and 1.6 million people were estimated to have died from violence in 2000. However, in epidemiologic studies of intentional injury, the injurer is typically unavailable or ignored in the data collection process, and actual intentions are rarely known or investigated. In practice, injurious intent is inferred when an injury is inflicted. While all allegedly intentional injuries are inflicted by the self or others, a review of the literature indicates that few inflicted injuries are intentional. The thesis of this paper is that the concept of intentional injury perpetuates an oversimplified view of both injurer and injured. Many injury victims are former perpetrators and vice versa; many have experienced multiple injuries, including self-inflicted injury; and many have histories of substance abuse, alcoholism, criminality, and other characteristics that form what can be described as a behavioral syndrome, of which susceptibility to injury (as perpetrator and/or victim) is one manifestation. The behavioral syndrome is hypothesized to represent a generalized, tropism-like tendency to seek varying intensities of sensory stimulation. Violit keywords: Injury Causes Injury Effects Injury Incidence and Prevalence Violence Causes Violence Effects Violence Incidence and Prevalence Adult Offender Adult Injury Adult Victim Adult Violence Victimization Incidence and Prevalence Offender Characteristics Victim Characteristics

LA - en SN - 1359-1789 UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.avb.2004.05.003 ID - ref1 ER -