Violence
in the Americas: Alarming but
Preventable
Washington,
DC, (PAHO)—Participants
in a Pan American Health Organization (PAHO)
meeting on June 11th presented
alarming statistics on the impact of
violence in the Americas: 120,000 people
are victims of homicide each year in the
Region, and 180,000 more die from
suicide and traffic accidents. In
countries for which data are available,
20–60 percent of women have been
victims of intrafamilial violence. Among
the fastest growing sources of violence
are youth gangs; in El Salvador and
Honduras alone, some 30,000 youths are
gang members.
During
the conference, "Alliances for the
Prevention of Violence," two recent
books on these issues were presented:
the World Health Organization's World
Report on Violence and Health (published
in October 2002) and the new PAHO
publication Violence Against Women: The
Health Sector Responds.
Experts
emphasized that violence is preventable
and that rates can be reduced through
political decision-making along with
measures that strengthen surveillance
systems and campaigns that focus on the
concrete problems faced by individual
countries.
"We
know the statistics on deaths by
violence, but we lack data on violence
that is not fatal," said Dr.
Etienne Krug, head of WHO’s Injuries
and Violence Prevention Department. Krug
presented the World Report on Violence
and Health and noted that it was the
product of three years' work by 160
experts from 70 countries. It is the
first report to describe in detail the
global toll of violence.
Dr.
Alberto Concha-Eastman, PAHO regional
advisor on violence and injury
prevention, presented data on homicides
in the Americas. The highest annual
rates are found in Colombia, with 65
homicides per 100,000 people; Honduras,
with 55 per 100,000; El Salvador, with
45; Jamaica, with 44; and Venezuela,
with 35 per 100,000. The lowest rates
are found in Canada, which reports only
2 homicides per 100,000 people; Costa
Rica, with 4 per 100,000; and in the
United States, with 6.5 per 100,000.
"One
high-risk social problem is youth
gangs," said Concha-Eastman.
"Of the thousands of kids who
belong to these gangs, especially in
Jamaica, Costa Rica, Peru, Guatemala,
Honduras, Mexico and Nicaragua, El
Salvador, the United States and Brazil,
55 percent are under 15 and only 25
percent have completed elementary
school." He added that many of
these youths become adults involved in
organized crime.
Other
participants presented successful
experiences with violence prevention.
Dr. Rodrigo Guerrero, of the
Inter-America Coalition for Violence
Prevention and former mayor of Cali,
Colombia, described successful
initiatives in that city and in the
capital of Bogotá. "In the early
1990s, the increase in violence was
alarming. For this reason, we decided to
map out the violence, and we found that
most homicides occurred on weekends and
that 40 percent of the victims were
intoxicated. Seeing that alcohol was a
risk factor, we decided to restrict
consumption."
This
measure, combined with restrictions on
discotheques’ hours, helped lower
crime rates from 80 homicides per
100,000 inhabitants in 1992 to 28 per
100,000 in 2000. Guerrero explained that
political awareness of the problem had
been critical to addressing it, along
with an approach that was not only penal
but also cultural. "It was
important that people understood that
life was sacred and that you have to
respect it," he said.
Dr.
Marijke Velzeboer-Salcedo, head of
PAHO’s Gender and Health Unit,
presented the new PAHO book Violence
Against Women: The Health Sector
Responds, noting that it was the result
of 10 years of work in 10 countries,
involving more than 150 communities.
"Gender violence is one of the most
common forms of abuse and it is
devastating. And in many cases, women
are victims of their own partners,"
she said.
Researchers
found that most women did not know their
rights and that they encountered
obstacles and misunderstanding when they
approached the health system. For this
reason, Velzeboer-Salcedo said it is
important to work with health
professionals and train them to detect
cases of violence and begin to break the
cycle of violence, "a cycle that
causes physical and mental problems and
even murder and suicide."
Dr. David
Brandling-Bennett, deputy director of
PAHO, noted that the Organization has
been focusing on the problem of violence
since 1993, when its Directing
Council— which consists of the
ministries of health of the
Americas—defined violence as a public
health problem and encouraged
governments to develop national plans to
prevent it.
PAHO was
established in 1902 and is the world’s
oldest ongoing health organization. PAHO
works with all the countries of the
Americas to improve health and improve
the quality of life of its inhabitants.
It serves as the Regional Office for the
Americas of the World Health
Organization.
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