The validity of open-source data when assessing jail suicides

Abstract Background The Bureau of Justice Statistics’ Deaths in Custody Reporting Program is the primary source for jail suicide research, though the data is restricted from general dissemination. This study is the first to examine whether jail suicide data obtained from publicly available sources c...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Amanda L. Thomas, Jacqueline Scott, Jeff Mellow
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2018-05-01
Series:Health & Justice
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40352-018-0069-2
id doaj-cfecd123576445e099b9e0bd6bf1f689
record_format Article
spelling doaj-cfecd123576445e099b9e0bd6bf1f6892020-11-25T01:07:27ZengBMCHealth & Justice2194-78992018-05-016111010.1186/s40352-018-0069-2The validity of open-source data when assessing jail suicidesAmanda L. Thomas0Jacqueline Scott1Jeff Mellow2John Jay College of Criminal JusticeJohn Jay College of Criminal JusticeJohn Jay College of Criminal JusticeAbstract Background The Bureau of Justice Statistics’ Deaths in Custody Reporting Program is the primary source for jail suicide research, though the data is restricted from general dissemination. This study is the first to examine whether jail suicide data obtained from publicly available sources can help inform our understanding of this serious public health problem. Methods Of the 304 suicides that were reported through the DCRP in 2009, roughly 56 percent (N = 170) of those suicides were identified through the open-source search protocol. Each of the sources was assessed based on how much information was collected on the incident and the types of variables available. A descriptive analysis was then conducted on the variables that were present in both data sources. The four variables present in each data source were: (1) demographic characteristics of the victim, (2) the location of occurrence within the facility, (3) the location of occurrence by state, and (4) the size of the facility. Results Findings demonstrate that the prevalence and correlates of jail suicides are extremely similar in both open-source and official data. However, for almost every variable measured, open-source data captured as much information as official data did, if not more. Further, variables not found in official data were identified in the open-source database, thus allowing researchers to have a more nuanced understanding of the situational characteristics of the event. Conclusions This research provides support for the argument in favor of including open-source data in jail suicide research as it illustrates how open-source data can be used to provide additional information not originally found in official data. In sum, this research is vital in terms of possible suicide prevention, which may be directly linked to being able to manipulate environmental factors.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40352-018-0069-2Jail suicideOpen-source dataOfficial dataDCRP
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Amanda L. Thomas
Jacqueline Scott
Jeff Mellow
spellingShingle Amanda L. Thomas
Jacqueline Scott
Jeff Mellow
The validity of open-source data when assessing jail suicides
Health & Justice
Jail suicide
Open-source data
Official data
DCRP
author_facet Amanda L. Thomas
Jacqueline Scott
Jeff Mellow
author_sort Amanda L. Thomas
title The validity of open-source data when assessing jail suicides
title_short The validity of open-source data when assessing jail suicides
title_full The validity of open-source data when assessing jail suicides
title_fullStr The validity of open-source data when assessing jail suicides
title_full_unstemmed The validity of open-source data when assessing jail suicides
title_sort validity of open-source data when assessing jail suicides
publisher BMC
series Health & Justice
issn 2194-7899
publishDate 2018-05-01
description Abstract Background The Bureau of Justice Statistics’ Deaths in Custody Reporting Program is the primary source for jail suicide research, though the data is restricted from general dissemination. This study is the first to examine whether jail suicide data obtained from publicly available sources can help inform our understanding of this serious public health problem. Methods Of the 304 suicides that were reported through the DCRP in 2009, roughly 56 percent (N = 170) of those suicides were identified through the open-source search protocol. Each of the sources was assessed based on how much information was collected on the incident and the types of variables available. A descriptive analysis was then conducted on the variables that were present in both data sources. The four variables present in each data source were: (1) demographic characteristics of the victim, (2) the location of occurrence within the facility, (3) the location of occurrence by state, and (4) the size of the facility. Results Findings demonstrate that the prevalence and correlates of jail suicides are extremely similar in both open-source and official data. However, for almost every variable measured, open-source data captured as much information as official data did, if not more. Further, variables not found in official data were identified in the open-source database, thus allowing researchers to have a more nuanced understanding of the situational characteristics of the event. Conclusions This research provides support for the argument in favor of including open-source data in jail suicide research as it illustrates how open-source data can be used to provide additional information not originally found in official data. In sum, this research is vital in terms of possible suicide prevention, which may be directly linked to being able to manipulate environmental factors.
topic Jail suicide
Open-source data
Official data
DCRP
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40352-018-0069-2
work_keys_str_mv AT amandalthomas thevalidityofopensourcedatawhenassessingjailsuicides
AT jacquelinescott thevalidityofopensourcedatawhenassessingjailsuicides
AT jeffmellow thevalidityofopensourcedatawhenassessingjailsuicides
AT amandalthomas validityofopensourcedatawhenassessingjailsuicides
AT jacquelinescott validityofopensourcedatawhenassessingjailsuicides
AT jeffmellow validityofopensourcedatawhenassessingjailsuicides
_version_ 1725187212144803840