Abstract

Objective: To identify the prevalence of maxillofacial injuries resulting from interpersonal violence in Brazilian children and adolescents. Material and Methods: This is a retrospective study conducted at a Center of Forensic Medicine and Forensic Dentistry with a sample of 335 medical reports of victims aged up to 19 years. Variables involved sex and age group, perpetrator, occurrence of the event, characterization of injuries, presence of maxillofacial injuries, type of tissue involvement, and injuries in the oral cavity. Data were analyzed using descriptive, and the Chi-square was used for categorical data . Results: Most victims were female (60.3%) and aged 15-19 years (57.6%). Aggressions occurred at home (50.6%), in the evening (39.5%) and involved perpetrators known to the victim (91.5%). Most victims had multiple injuries (75.8%), involving up to three regions of the body (93.4%). Injuries with blunt objects were the most frequent (86.2%). The prevalence of maxillofacial injuries was 36.7%, with low involvement of the oral cavity (8.4%). A significant association between the presence of injuries on the face and variables “perpetrator” (p=0.015) and “number of injuries” (p=0.006) was observed . Conclusion: Female adolescents were the main victims of physical violence, with repercussions in different regions of the body. The prevalence of maxillofacial injuries was high, although with little involvement of oral cavity structures.

Highlights

  • Violence is recognized as a major and growing public health problem for which no country, no city, and no community is immune [1]

  • Objective: To identify the prevalence of maxillofacial injuries resulting from interpersonal violence in Brazilian children and adolescents

  • Female adolescents were the main victims of physical violence, with repercussions in different regions of the body

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Summary

Introduction

Violence is recognized as a major and growing public health problem for which no country, no city, and no community is immune [1]. Several characteristics contribute to the increase in statistics on violence against children and adolescents, among which inadequacy of social, economic, health and education policies, leading to living standards based on socioeconomic instability or inequality [3]. In the period from 2011 to 2017, 1,460,326 cases of interpersonal or self-harm violence were reported in the Information System for Notifiable Diseases of the Ministry of Health of Brazil (SINAN / MS). Of this total, 219,717 (15.0%) notifications were against children, and 372,014 (25.5%) were against adolescents, which represents 40.5% of cases reported in the system in that period [5]

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