Indicators for estimating trends in alcohol-related assault: Evaluation using police data from Queensland, Australia

Monitoring levels of alcohol-related harm in populations requires indicators that are robust to extraneous influence. We investigated the validity of an indicator for police-attributed alcohol-related assault. We summarized offence records from Queensland Police, investigated patterns of missing dat...

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Main Authors: Nepal, S., Kypri, K., Attia, J., Chikritzhs, Tanya, Miller, P.
Format: Journal Article
Published: B M J Group 2019
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/74714
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author Nepal, S.
Kypri, K.
Attia, J.
Chikritzhs, Tanya
Miller, P.
author_facet Nepal, S.
Kypri, K.
Attia, J.
Chikritzhs, Tanya
Miller, P.
author_sort Nepal, S.
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Monitoring levels of alcohol-related harm in populations requires indicators that are robust to extraneous influence. We investigated the validity of an indicator for police-attributed alcohol-related assault. We summarized offence records from Queensland Police, investigated patterns of missing data, and considered the utility of a surrogate for alcohol-related assault. Of 242 107 assaults from 2004-2014, in 35% of cases the drug used by the offender was recorded as 'unknown'. Under various assumptions about non-random missingness the proportion of assaults judged to be alcohol-related varied from 30%-65%. We found a sharp increase in missing data from 2007 suggesting the downward trend from that point is artefactual. Conversely, we found a stable and increasing trend using a time-based surrogate. The volume of missing data and other limitations preclude valid estimation of trends using the police indicator, and demonstrate how misleading results can be produced. Our analysis supports the use of an empirically-based surrogate indicator.
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institution Curtin University Malaysia
institution_category Local University
last_indexed 2025-11-14T11:02:06Z
publishDate 2019
publisher B M J Group
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-747142019-10-14T04:15:29Z Indicators for estimating trends in alcohol-related assault: Evaluation using police data from Queensland, Australia Nepal, S. Kypri, K. Attia, J. Chikritzhs, Tanya Miller, P. Monitoring levels of alcohol-related harm in populations requires indicators that are robust to extraneous influence. We investigated the validity of an indicator for police-attributed alcohol-related assault. We summarized offence records from Queensland Police, investigated patterns of missing data, and considered the utility of a surrogate for alcohol-related assault. Of 242 107 assaults from 2004-2014, in 35% of cases the drug used by the offender was recorded as 'unknown'. Under various assumptions about non-random missingness the proportion of assaults judged to be alcohol-related varied from 30%-65%. We found a sharp increase in missing data from 2007 suggesting the downward trend from that point is artefactual. Conversely, we found a stable and increasing trend using a time-based surrogate. The volume of missing data and other limitations preclude valid estimation of trends using the police indicator, and demonstrate how misleading results can be produced. Our analysis supports the use of an empirically-based surrogate indicator. 2019 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/74714 10.1136/injuryprev-2018-042985 B M J Group restricted
spellingShingle Nepal, S.
Kypri, K.
Attia, J.
Chikritzhs, Tanya
Miller, P.
Indicators for estimating trends in alcohol-related assault: Evaluation using police data from Queensland, Australia
title Indicators for estimating trends in alcohol-related assault: Evaluation using police data from Queensland, Australia
title_full Indicators for estimating trends in alcohol-related assault: Evaluation using police data from Queensland, Australia
title_fullStr Indicators for estimating trends in alcohol-related assault: Evaluation using police data from Queensland, Australia
title_full_unstemmed Indicators for estimating trends in alcohol-related assault: Evaluation using police data from Queensland, Australia
title_short Indicators for estimating trends in alcohol-related assault: Evaluation using police data from Queensland, Australia
title_sort indicators for estimating trends in alcohol-related assault: evaluation using police data from queensland, australia
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/74714