Western Mail

10% fall in numbers treated at A&E for violence-link injuries

- Hayden Smith newsdesk@walesonlin­e.co.uk

SERIOUS violence dipped by a 10th in Wales and England last year, but casualties peaked at weekends amid spikes in alcohol-fuelled incidents, according to research.

Academics found an estimated 188,803 people attended emergency department­s for treatment following violence in 2016 – 21,437 fewer than the previous year.

The report said the latest fall continues steady reductions since 2002, with last year’s tally 40% down compared with 2010.

Lead author Professor Jonathan Shepherd, director of the Violence Research Group at Cardiff University, said: “Our study demonstrat­es a substantia­l decrease in violence-related injuries for both men and women in 2016 compared to 2015.

“Since 2010, we have identified a decline of 40% in people needing treatment in emergency department­s after violence.

“The substantia­l year-onyear decline in serious violence is welcome news for citizens and communitie­s across England and Wales.

“Moreover, costs imposed on health services and the criminal justice system by violence have been substantia­lly reduced along with burdens on stretched emergency department­s.”

The paper said the reasons for the continuing fall are not clear, but suggested improvemen­ts in detection and reporting, better targeted policing, improved sharing of data by emergency department­s, and local collaborat­ion to tackle violence on the streets, in licensed premises and domestic settings.

The analysis also showed that violence-related attendance at emergency department­s was most frequent on Saturdays and Sundays.

Prof Shepherd said: “Our findings suggest that alcoholrel­ated violence remains a significan­t problem, with violence-related emergency department attendance consistent­ly at its highest levels on weekends.”

Violence peaked in May, July and October. Experts have previously suggested higher numbers in spring and summer could be related to longer daylight hours, which result in larger numbers of people in urban centres for longer periods.

The latest report, based on data from 152 emergency department­s, minor injury units and walk-in centres, found that those most at risk of injury from violence were males and those aged 18 to 30.

Although the overall number fell, violence-related attendance­s of children aged up to 10 increased by 10% last year compared with 2015.

Researcher­s said this apparent rise should be treated with caution due to the low number of children sampled.

Official measures present a complex picture of the trends in violent crime. Levels estimated by the Crime Survey for England and Wales have shown substantia­l falls over the longer term, before remaining fairly flat in the last two years.

Meanwhile, police recorded an annual rise of 22% in violence against the person offences in the year to September – although statistici­ans say this was largely driven by changes in recording processes and the inclusion of additional harassment offences.

Earlier this month, Metropolit­an Police figures showed sharp jumps in recorded knife and gun crime.

 ?? Matt Cardy ?? > The number of people treated at A&E for violence-related injuries continues to fall
Matt Cardy > The number of people treated at A&E for violence-related injuries continues to fall

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