Retrospective review on patients admitted for violent crime in Permai Hospital, Malaysia.

Objective: To study the demographic data of patients and the pattern of crime in the study group, to look at the outcome of assessment by psychiatrist on fitness to plea and insanity at time of offense and to assess association between the nature of crime with presence of psychopathology during the...

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Main Authors: Md Rosli, Najwa Hanim, AB, Abdul Kadir
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Malaysian Psychiatry Association 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://irep.iium.edu.my/35816/
http://irep.iium.edu.my/35816/
http://irep.iium.edu.my/35816/1/112.pdf
id iium-35816
recordtype eprints
spelling iium-358162014-03-09T04:54:09Z http://irep.iium.edu.my/35816/ Retrospective review on patients admitted for violent crime in Permai Hospital, Malaysia. Md Rosli, Najwa Hanim AB, Abdul Kadir RA Public aspects of medicine RC0321 Neuroscience. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry Objective: To study the demographic data of patients and the pattern of crime in the study group, to look at the outcome of assessment by psychiatrist on fitness to plea and insanity at time of offense and to assess association between the nature of crime with presence of psychopathology during the crime. Methods: This is a retrospective study. All available case notes for 342 forensic admissions from January 2007 until March 2010 were reviewed. All related information on 135 patients that committed violent crime was taken for analysis. Results: Majority of patients were male, Malay, single, education up to secondary school and unemployed. Only 38% of patients had encountered psychiatric services, 20% had previous imprisonment and 49% had history of substance usage. In cases involving victims (87%), 64% the victims were known to the patient, 53% had hallucination or delusion or both at the time of crime and 90% was found to have some diagnosis of mental illness after psychiatrist assessment. Only 81% of formal forensic reports were available in the case note and it showed 94% were fit to plea and 82% were at sound mind at the time of offense. Conclusion: Substance abuse had high prevalence among the patient. Almost 2/3 never had any encounter with psychiatric services before the admission. Even with the high percentage of patient diagnosed with mental illness, they were still found to be fit to plea in court and are at sound mind at the time of offense. Malaysian Psychiatry Association 2011 Article NonPeerReviewed application/pdf en http://irep.iium.edu.my/35816/1/112.pdf Md Rosli, Najwa Hanim and AB, Abdul Kadir (2011) Retrospective review on patients admitted for violent crime in Permai Hospital, Malaysia. Malaysian Journal of Phyciatry Ejournal, 20 (1). ISSN 2232-0385 http://www.mjpsychiatry.com/index.php/mjp/article/viewFile/130/112
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Local University
institution International Islamic University Malaysia
building IIUM Repository
collection Online Access
language English
topic RA Public aspects of medicine
RC0321 Neuroscience. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry
spellingShingle RA Public aspects of medicine
RC0321 Neuroscience. Biological psychiatry. Neuropsychiatry
Md Rosli, Najwa Hanim
AB, Abdul Kadir
Retrospective review on patients admitted for violent crime in Permai Hospital, Malaysia.
description Objective: To study the demographic data of patients and the pattern of crime in the study group, to look at the outcome of assessment by psychiatrist on fitness to plea and insanity at time of offense and to assess association between the nature of crime with presence of psychopathology during the crime. Methods: This is a retrospective study. All available case notes for 342 forensic admissions from January 2007 until March 2010 were reviewed. All related information on 135 patients that committed violent crime was taken for analysis. Results: Majority of patients were male, Malay, single, education up to secondary school and unemployed. Only 38% of patients had encountered psychiatric services, 20% had previous imprisonment and 49% had history of substance usage. In cases involving victims (87%), 64% the victims were known to the patient, 53% had hallucination or delusion or both at the time of crime and 90% was found to have some diagnosis of mental illness after psychiatrist assessment. Only 81% of formal forensic reports were available in the case note and it showed 94% were fit to plea and 82% were at sound mind at the time of offense. Conclusion: Substance abuse had high prevalence among the patient. Almost 2/3 never had any encounter with psychiatric services before the admission. Even with the high percentage of patient diagnosed with mental illness, they were still found to be fit to plea in court and are at sound mind at the time of offense.
format Article
author Md Rosli, Najwa Hanim
AB, Abdul Kadir
author_facet Md Rosli, Najwa Hanim
AB, Abdul Kadir
author_sort Md Rosli, Najwa Hanim
title Retrospective review on patients admitted for violent crime in Permai Hospital, Malaysia.
title_short Retrospective review on patients admitted for violent crime in Permai Hospital, Malaysia.
title_full Retrospective review on patients admitted for violent crime in Permai Hospital, Malaysia.
title_fullStr Retrospective review on patients admitted for violent crime in Permai Hospital, Malaysia.
title_full_unstemmed Retrospective review on patients admitted for violent crime in Permai Hospital, Malaysia.
title_sort retrospective review on patients admitted for violent crime in permai hospital, malaysia.
publisher Malaysian Psychiatry Association
publishDate 2011
url http://irep.iium.edu.my/35816/
http://irep.iium.edu.my/35816/
http://irep.iium.edu.my/35816/1/112.pdf
first_indexed 2023-09-18T20:51:17Z
last_indexed 2023-09-18T20:51:17Z
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