Injuries associated with police use of force

F. William Brown, Jason Stopyra, David Klinger, Brian P Martin, Derrel D. Graham, Jame C Johnson, Katherine Mahoney-Tesoriero, Sydney J Vail

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

BACKGROUND 
Use of force [UOF] by police can result in serious injuries and fatalities. The risk of significant injuries associated with different force modalities is poorly defined. We sought to determine the incidence of police UOF and compare the likelihood of significant injury with different force modalities.
METHODS 
A prospective multicenter observational study of all UOF incidents was conducted via mandatory UOF investigations at three mid-sized police agencies over a two year period. Expert physicians reviewed police and medical records to determine injury severity using  a priori  injury severity stratification criteria.
RESULTS 
There were 893 UOF incidents, representing a UOF rate of 0.086% of 1,041,737 calls for service (1 in 1167) and 0.78% of 114,064 criminal arrests(1 in 128). Suspects were primarily young (mean age, 31 years; range, 12–86 years) males (89%). The 1,399 force utilizations included unarmed physical force (n = 710, 51%), CEWs (504, 30%), chemical (88, 6.3%), canines (47, 3.4%), impact weapons (9, 0.6%), kinetic impact munitions (8, 0.6%), firearms (6, 0.4%), and other (27, 1.9%). Among 914 suspects, 898 (98%) sustained no or mild injury after police UOF. Significant (moderate or severe) injuries occurred in 16 (1.8%) subjects. Logistic regression analysis shows these are most associated with firearm and canine use. There was one fatality (0.1%) due to gunshots. No significant injuries occurred among 504 CEW uses (0%; 95% confidence interval, 0.0–0.9%). Of the 355 suspects transported to a medical facility, 78 (22%) were hospitalized. The majority of hospitalizations were unrelated to UOF (n = 59, 76%), whereas a minority (n = 19, 24%) were due to injuries related to police UOF.
CONCLUSION 
Police UOF is rare. When force is used officers most commonly rely on unarmed physical force and CEWs. Significant injuries are rare. Transport for medical evaluation is a poor surrogate for significant injury due to UOF.
LEVEL OF EVIDENCE 
Epidemiological, level II.
Original languageAmerican English
JournalJournal of Trauma and Acute Care Surgery
Volume84
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 2018

Keywords

  • Police
  • conducted electrical weapons
  • firearms
  • pepper spray
  • use of force

Disciplines

  • Law Enforcement and Corrections

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