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Re: re unrelated males in household
Granted, death is an infrequent outcome in abuse cases (thank
heaven). However, the difference between aggravated assault and
homicide is often a combination of luck (good or bad), and access to
prompt medical care. Homicide is often studied because it is easy to
count accurately, and because there is usually a lot of information
available about these cases. Assault is much more frequent, harder
to measure, and records are likely to be incomplete.
Child homicide is literally the canary in the abuse coal mine. When
less sensitive indicators are unavailable, death is a clear indicator of
trouble.
It seems to me that the point of the study is to confirm the suspicion
that unrelated males in the household are a risk factor for child
abuse. The problems measuring low base rates means that a
relationship has to be very strong if we are going to pick it up as
significant.
The application of the information about risks associated with
presence of unrelated males is just the same as the application of
other risk factor information. It should support a closer look into
family circumstances, and be added to other information on a case
by case basis. Joan E. Crowley
New Mexico State University
Department of Criminal Justice
MSC 3487
Box 30001
Las Cruces, NM 88003-8001
jcrowley@nmsu.edu