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Fatal Police Violence by Race and State in the Usa, 1980–2019: A Network Meta-Regression Publisher Pubmed



Sharara F1 ; Wool EE1 ; Bertolacci GJ1 ; Weaver ND1 ; Balassyano S1 ; Watson A1 ; Dippenaar IN1 ; Cunningham M1 ; Fuller JE1 ; Marczak LB1 ; Johnson CO1 ; Roth GA1, 2, 3 ; Abedi A7 ; Acuna JM9, 10 Show All Authors
Authors
  1. Sharara F1
  2. Wool EE1
  3. Bertolacci GJ1
  4. Weaver ND1
  5. Balassyano S1
  6. Watson A1
  7. Dippenaar IN1
  8. Cunningham M1
  9. Fuller JE1
  10. Marczak LB1
  11. Johnson CO1
  12. Roth GA1, 2, 3
  13. Abedi A7
  14. Acuna JM9, 10
  15. Advani SM11, 12
  16. Agasthi P13
  17. Alahdab F14
  18. Alaly Z15, 16
  19. Antony CM1
  20. Assari S17
  21. Awan AT18, 19
  22. Basu S20, 25
  23. Bell AW21, 26
  24. Braithwaite D27, 28
  25. Burkart K1, 3
  26. Chew A1
  27. Cho DY4
  28. Chowdhury MAK29, 30
  29. Dai X1
  30. Daoud F1
  31. Dharmaratne SD1, 3, 32
  32. Dwyerlindgren L1, 3
  33. Elgendy IY22, 33
  34. Fares J35
  35. Farwati M37, 39
  36. Fisher JL41
  37. Gholamrezanezhad A8
  38. Gopalani SV43, 44
  39. Grada A45
  40. Guha A42, 47
  41. Hafezinejad N50, 52
  42. Haider MR54
  43. Hay SI1, 3
  44. Hossain MM55, 56
  45. Ikuta KS1, 5
  46. Islam JY57
  47. Jabbarinejad R36, 53
  48. Khatab K58, 59
  49. Khubchandani J60
  50. Kim D61
  51. Kimokoti RW62
  52. Kisa A63, 64
  53. Krishnamoorthy V6, 65
  54. Krohn KJ1
  55. Lawrence WR67, 68
  56. Legrand KE1
  57. Lim SS1, 3
  58. Lin Z69
  59. Liu X38, 48
  60. Mahmoudi M70
  61. Martinezpiedra R71
  62. Mehta KM72
  63. Miller TR73, 74
  64. Moitra M1
  65. Mokdad AH1, 3
  66. Morrison SD75
  67. Murray CJL1, 3
  68. Napoles AM76
  69. Nsoesie EO46
  70. Odell CM1
  71. Pawar S77
  72. Perezstable EJ78
  73. Pilz TM1
  74. Ram P79
  75. Roberts NLS80
  76. Salehi S8
  77. Sanabria J49, 81
  78. Schwebel DC82
  79. Sheikh A23, 84
  80. Sigfusdottir ID85, 86
  81. Singh JA83, 87
  82. Spurlock EE1
  83. Sykes BL88
  84. Tadbiri H51
  85. Tleyjeh II40, 89
  86. Tsai AC34, 90
  87. Vos T1, 3
  88. Wu C66, 91
  89. Yandrapalli S92, 93
  90. Yunusa I24, 31
  91. Zand R94, 95
  92. Zhang W96
  93. Naghavi M1, 3

Source: The Lancet Published:2021


Abstract

Background: The burden of fatal police violence is an urgent public health crisis in the USA. Mounting evidence shows that deaths at the hands of the police disproportionately impact people of certain races and ethnicities, pointing to systemic racism in policing. Recent high-profile killings by police in the USA have prompted calls for more extensive and public data reporting on police violence. This study examines the presence and extent of under-reporting of police violence in US Government-run vital registration data, offers a method for correcting under-reporting in these datasets, and presents revised estimates of deaths due to police violence in the USA. Methods: We compared data from the USA National Vital Statistics System (NVSS) to three non-governmental, open-source databases on police violence: Fatal Encounters, Mapping Police Violence, and The Counted. We extracted and standardised the age, sex, US state of death registration, year of death, and race and ethnicity (non-Hispanic White, non-Hispanic Black, non-Hispanic of other races, and Hispanic of any race) of each decedent for all data sources and used a network meta-regression to quantify the rate of under-reporting within the NVSS. Using these rates to inform correction factors, we provide adjusted estimates of deaths due to police violence for all states, ages, sexes, and racial and ethnic groups from 1980 to 2019 across the USA. Findings: Across all races and states in the USA, we estimate 30 800 deaths (95% uncertainty interval [UI] 30 300–31 300) from police violence between 1980 and 2018; this represents 17 100 more deaths (16 600–17 600) than reported by the NVSS. Over this time period, the age-standardised mortality rate due to police violence was highest in non-Hispanic Black people (0·69 [95% UI 0·67–0·71] per 100 000), followed by Hispanic people of any race (0·35 [0·34–0·36]), non-Hispanic White people (0·20 [0·19–0·20]), and non-Hispanic people of other races (0·15 [0·14– 0·16]). This variation is further affected by the decedent's sex and shows large discrepancies between states. Between 1980 and 2018, the NVSS did not report 55·5% (54·8–56·2) of all deaths attributable to police violence. When aggregating all races, the age-standardised mortality rate due to police violence was 0·25 (0·24–0·26) per 100 000 in the 1980s and 0·34 (0·34–0·35) per 100 000 in the 2010s, an increase of 38·4% (32·4–45·1) over the period of study. Interpretation: We found that more than half of all deaths due to police violence that we estimated in the USA from 1980 to 2018 were unreported in the NVSS. Compounding this, we found substantial differences in the age-standardised mortality rate due to police violence over time and by racial and ethnic groups within the USA. Proven public health intervention strategies are needed to address these systematic biases. State-level estimates allow for appropriate targeting of these strategies to address police violence and improve its reporting. Funding: Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities, and National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute. © 2021 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an Open Access article under the CC BY 4.0 license.
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