Collecting sexual assault history and forensic evidence from adult women in the emergency department: a retrospective study

Abstract Background The objective of this retrospective study was to examine the discrepancy between information derived from written medical reports and the results of forensic DNA analyses on swabs collected from the victims in 122 cases of alleged sexual assault treated at the Emergency Departmen...

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Main Authors: Pamela Tozzo, Elena Ponzano, Gloria Spigarolo, Patrizia Nespeca, Luciana Caenazzo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-05-01
Series:BMC Health Services Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-018-3205-8
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spelling doaj-84c15d7df9434d9c929b732d24ebcf8d2020-11-25T00:23:36ZengBMCBMC Health Services Research1472-69632018-05-011811610.1186/s12913-018-3205-8Collecting sexual assault history and forensic evidence from adult women in the emergency department: a retrospective studyPamela Tozzo0Elena Ponzano1Gloria Spigarolo2Patrizia Nespeca3Luciana Caenazzo4Department of Molecular Medicine, Laboratory of Forensic Genetics, University of PadovaDepartment of Molecular Medicine, Laboratory of Forensic Genetics, University of PadovaDepartment of Molecular Medicine, Laboratory of Forensic Genetics, University of PadovaDepartment of Molecular Medicine, Laboratory of Forensic Genetics, University of PadovaDepartment of Molecular Medicine, Laboratory of Forensic Genetics, University of PadovaAbstract Background The objective of this retrospective study was to examine the discrepancy between information derived from written medical reports and the results of forensic DNA analyses on swabs collected from the victims in 122 cases of alleged sexual assault treated at the Emergency Department of Padua Hospital. The examination of discrepant results has proved useful to support a broader application of sexual assault management, particularly during the taking of case history. Methods The Laboratory of Forensic Genetics of Padua University have processed samples from 122 sexual assault cases over a period of 5 years. Results Of the 103 cases in which the victim reported a penetration and ejaculation, only 67 (55% of all the samples) correlated with positive feedback match from the laboratory. In 36 cases in which the patient reported penetration with ejaculation, no male DNA was found in the samples collected. Therefore, there was a total of 41 cases in which the patient’s report were not supported by laboratory data. In the remaining ten cases, which had an ambiguous history, 3 tested positively for the presence of male DNA. Conclusions To avoid discrepancies between the medical reporting and reconstruction of sex crimes, it is crucial to deploy strategies which focus not only on the technical aspects of evidence collection, but also on how the victim’s story is recorded; such efforts could lead to better management of sexual assault victims, and to a strengthened legal impact of forensic evidence and of crime reconstruction.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-018-3205-8Sexual assaultVictim’s case historyForensic geneticsHealthcare professionals
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Pamela Tozzo
Elena Ponzano
Gloria Spigarolo
Patrizia Nespeca
Luciana Caenazzo
spellingShingle Pamela Tozzo
Elena Ponzano
Gloria Spigarolo
Patrizia Nespeca
Luciana Caenazzo
Collecting sexual assault history and forensic evidence from adult women in the emergency department: a retrospective study
BMC Health Services Research
Sexual assault
Victim’s case history
Forensic genetics
Healthcare professionals
author_facet Pamela Tozzo
Elena Ponzano
Gloria Spigarolo
Patrizia Nespeca
Luciana Caenazzo
author_sort Pamela Tozzo
title Collecting sexual assault history and forensic evidence from adult women in the emergency department: a retrospective study
title_short Collecting sexual assault history and forensic evidence from adult women in the emergency department: a retrospective study
title_full Collecting sexual assault history and forensic evidence from adult women in the emergency department: a retrospective study
title_fullStr Collecting sexual assault history and forensic evidence from adult women in the emergency department: a retrospective study
title_full_unstemmed Collecting sexual assault history and forensic evidence from adult women in the emergency department: a retrospective study
title_sort collecting sexual assault history and forensic evidence from adult women in the emergency department: a retrospective study
publisher BMC
series BMC Health Services Research
issn 1472-6963
publishDate 2018-05-01
description Abstract Background The objective of this retrospective study was to examine the discrepancy between information derived from written medical reports and the results of forensic DNA analyses on swabs collected from the victims in 122 cases of alleged sexual assault treated at the Emergency Department of Padua Hospital. The examination of discrepant results has proved useful to support a broader application of sexual assault management, particularly during the taking of case history. Methods The Laboratory of Forensic Genetics of Padua University have processed samples from 122 sexual assault cases over a period of 5 years. Results Of the 103 cases in which the victim reported a penetration and ejaculation, only 67 (55% of all the samples) correlated with positive feedback match from the laboratory. In 36 cases in which the patient reported penetration with ejaculation, no male DNA was found in the samples collected. Therefore, there was a total of 41 cases in which the patient’s report were not supported by laboratory data. In the remaining ten cases, which had an ambiguous history, 3 tested positively for the presence of male DNA. Conclusions To avoid discrepancies between the medical reporting and reconstruction of sex crimes, it is crucial to deploy strategies which focus not only on the technical aspects of evidence collection, but also on how the victim’s story is recorded; such efforts could lead to better management of sexual assault victims, and to a strengthened legal impact of forensic evidence and of crime reconstruction.
topic Sexual assault
Victim’s case history
Forensic genetics
Healthcare professionals
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-018-3205-8
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