1. Homicide among Indigenous females in North Carolina: a comparison of publicly generated data and violent death reporting system.
- Author
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Hudhud, Muhammad, Proescholdbell, Scott, Norwood, Tammy, Cavalier-Keck, Crystal, and Bell, Ronny A
- Subjects
MISSING & murdered Indigenous women crisis, 1984- ,VIOLENT deaths ,HOMICIDE rates ,DEATH rate ,HOMICIDE ,DATABASES - Abstract
Like other minoritized populations, American Indian/Alaska Native (AI/AN) females experience disparate morbidity and mortality outcomes to that of the general US population. This study identified discrepancies in reporting of AI/AN female decedents between the North Carolina Violent Death Reporting System (NC-VDRS) and an online, user-generated database. Female AI/AN decedent data of all ages were collected from the NC-VDRS and compared against that of the publicly available North Carolina Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women (MMIW NC) database for the study period, 2004–2019. Twenty-four of the 72 cases matched between data systems (33.3%). Substantive differences between the NC-VDRS and the MMIW NC database were found. Future efforts should be directed towards supporting Indigenous communities with the comprehensive data the NC-VDRS can provide. This paper highlights statewide public health systems like the NC-VDRS supporting community efforts to understand, advocate for, and disseminate information on MMIW. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
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