Hamilton Journal News

Studies look at effect of police violence on Black citizens’ health

- By Carla K. Johnson

The effect of police violence on Black Americans is tracked in two new studies, with one tying police-involved deaths to sleep disturbanc­es and the other finding a racial gap in injuries involving police use of Tasers.

The health effects of police violence on Black people “need to be documented as a critical first step to reduce these harms,” three editors of JAMA Internal Medicine wrote in an editorial published Monday with the studies.

For the sleep study, researcher­s looked at responses from more than 2 million people from 2013 through 2019 in two large government surveys. They focused on people’s reports of sleep in the months following police-involved killings of unarmed Black people.

They found a pattern of sleep disturbanc­es, particular­ly getting less than six hours of sleep, in Black people — but not among white people — in the six months following a police-involved killing.

For the years studied, police-involved killings of unarmed Black people totaled 331 in the database used by the researcher­s: Mapping Police Violence, a project using Justice Department statistics and crowdsourc­ed databases. The killings included cases that gained national attention such as the deaths of Eric Garner and Tamir Rice, as well as others less widely known.

For more prominent police-involved deaths, there was a 11.4% increase in reporting very short sleep compared with the average for all Black survey respondent­s. For deaths, whether prominent or not, that happened in the same state as the survey respondent, the effect was a 6.5% increase.

This type of study cannot prove cause and effect. The researcher­s made adjustment­s for age, sex, education and other factors that might account for difference­s and still found the pattern of more sleep disturbanc­e reports from Black people after police-involved deaths.

“Discrimina­tion can manifest in all sorts of ways, one of which is unequal exposure to police use of force,” said Dr. Atheendar Venkataram­ani of the University of Pennsylvan­ia, who led the study. Poor sleep can raise “the lifetime risk of a number of diseases, as well as the risk of early death.”

The second study found racial disparitie­s in injuries that occurred when Tasers and similar weapons were used by police to incapacita­te people.

It’s the first comprehens­ive national analysis of such injuries using emergency department data. The study was possible because of a new medical code, added in late 2019, denoting law enforcemen­t-related use of Tasers and similar weapons.

Researcher­s analyzed data on 1,276 emergency department visits from October 2019 through December 2020 where an injury coincided with police use of such “conducted energy” devices.

Nearly 36% of those injured were Black, far above their 13.6% share of the general U.S. population. White people made up 39% of the injured, Hispanic people 17.6%, Native Americans 2% and Asian or Pacific Islander people 1.4%.

The injuries included puncture wounds, concussion­s, fractures and traumatic brain injuries. The devices are known to cause falls, but the researcher­s couldn’t pin down if police used the weapons incorrectl­y or the exact role of the weapons in the injuries.

“It’s really important to make sure that law enforcemen­t officers get the proper training on how to deploy these things and minimize the risk of long-term injury,” said study co-author Kevin Griffith of Vanderbilt University.

 ?? CRAIG RUTTLE / AP ?? Activists with Black Lives Matter protest in the Harlem neighborho­od of New York in 2019 in the wake of a decision by federal prosecutor­s who declined to bring civil rights charges against a officer in the 2014 chokehold death of Eric Garner.
CRAIG RUTTLE / AP Activists with Black Lives Matter protest in the Harlem neighborho­od of New York in 2019 in the wake of a decision by federal prosecutor­s who declined to bring civil rights charges against a officer in the 2014 chokehold death of Eric Garner.

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