Department of Health, Behavior and Society, The Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, 624 North Broadway, Baltimore, MD 21205, USA.
Community Ment Health J. 2013 Feb;49(1):106-9. doi: 10.1007/s10597-012-9492-3.
In the US, there are no national statistics on encountering a dead body, which can be viewed as a measure of community health and a stressful life event. Participants for an HIV prevention intervention targeting drug users were recruited in areas of inner-city Baltimore, Maryland. Nine hundred and fifty-one respondents, most with a history of drug use, were asked "have you ever found a dead body?" and 17.0% reported they had. Leading causes of death were: violence (37%), natural causes (22.2%), drug overdose (21.6%), accidental death (3.1%), and suicide (2.5%). In multivariate logistic models, respondents with longer history of drug use and more roles in a drug economy were more likely to be exposed to a dead body. The study results suggest that this population has a high level of experiences with mortality associated with violence and drugs. To obtain a better understanding of community health, future studies should assess not only morbidity and mortality, but also how death and illness is experienced by the community.
在美国,没有关于遇到尸体的全国性统计数据,而这可以被视为社区健康和压力生活事件的衡量标准。针对吸毒者的艾滋病毒预防干预措施的参与者是在马里兰州巴尔的摩市的内城地区招募的。951 名受访者(大多数有吸毒史)被问到“你是否曾经发现过一具尸体?”,其中 17.0%的人回答有过。主要死因包括:暴力(37%)、自然原因(22.2%)、药物过量(21.6%)、意外死亡(3.1%)和自杀(2.5%)。在多变量逻辑回归模型中,药物使用史较长且在药物经济中扮演更多角色的受访者更有可能接触到尸体。研究结果表明,该人群与暴力和毒品相关的死亡率较高。为了更好地了解社区健康,未来的研究不仅应评估发病率和死亡率,还应评估社区对死亡和疾病的体验。