Newswise, March 3, 2016 — Researchers have identified three
risk factors that make adults with mental illness more likely to engage in
violent behavior.
The findings give mental health professionals and others
working with adults with mental illness a suite of characteristics they can use
as potential warning signs, allowing them to intervene and hopefully prevent
violent behavior.
“Our earlier work found that adults with mental illness are
more likely to be victims of violence than perpetrators – and that is
especially relevant to this new study,” says Sarah Desmarais, an associate
professor of psychology at North Carolina State University and co-author of a
paper describing the work.
“One of the new findings is that people with mental illness
who have been victims of violence in the past six months are more likely to
engage in future violent behavior themselves.”
The researchers compiled a database of 4,480 adults with
mental illnesses – including schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and depression –
who had answered questions about both committing violence and being victims of
violence in the previous six months.
The database drew from five earlier studies that focused on
issues ranging from antipsychotic medications to treatment approaches. Those
studies had different research goals, but all asked identical questions related
to violence and victimization.
The researchers assessed the data to determine which
behaviors, events and characteristics were most predictive of violent behavior
over a six-month period. Violent behavior, in this context, ranged from pushing
and shoving to sexual assault and assault with a deadly weapon.
The researchers found three risk factors that were predictive
of violent behavior: if an individual is currently using alcohol; if an
individual has engaged in violent behavior over the past six months; and if an
individual has been a victim of violence within the past six months.
“We found that these risk factors were predictive even when we
accounted for age, sex, race, mental illness diagnosis and other clinical
characteristics,” Desmarais says.
In contrast, the researchers found that current drug use was
not predictive of violent behavior, when age, sex, race, mental illness
diagnosis and other clinical characteristics were considered.
“This is useful information for anyone working in a clinical
setting,” Desmarais says. “But it also highlights the importance of creating
policies that can help protect people with mental illness from being
victimized. It’s not only the right thing to do, but it makes for safer
communities.”
The paper, “Proximal Risk Factors for Short-Term Community Violence Among
Adults with Mental Illnesses,” is published online in the journalPsychiatric
Services. Lead author of the paper is Kiersten Johnson, a Ph.D. student at
NC State. Co-authors were Kevin Grimm of the University of Arizona; Stephen
Tueller and Richard Van Dorn of RTI International; and Marvin Swartz of Duke
University. The work was supported by the National Institute for Mental Health
under grant number R01MH093426 to Van Dorn.
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