Stabbing

A stabbing is penetration with a sharp or pointed object at close range. Stab connotes purposeful action, as by an assassin or murderer, but it is also possible to accidentally stab oneself or others.Stabbing differs from slashing or cutting in that the motion of the object used in a stabbing generally moves perpendicular to and directly into the victim's body, rather than being drawn across it.

Stabbings today are common among gangs and in prisons because knives are cheap, easy to acquire (or manufacture), easily concealable and relatively effective. The threat of stabbing is perhaps the most common form of robbery.

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History

Stabbings have been common throughout human history and were the means used to assassinate a number of distinguished historical figures, such as Julius Caesar and the Roman Emperor Caligula.

In Japan, the historical practice of stabbing oneself deliberately in ritual suicide is known as seppuku (more colloquially hara-kiri, literally "belly-cutting" since it involves cutting open the abdomen). The ritual is highly codified, and the person committing suicide is assisted by a "second" who is entrusted to decapitate him cleanly (and thus expediate death and prevent an undignified spectacle) once he has made the abdominal wound.

Mechanism

The human skin has a somewhat elastic property as a self-defense; when the human body is stabbed by a thin object such as a kitchen knife, the skin often closes tightly around the object and closes again if the object is removed, which can trap some blood within the body. Some have speculated that the fuller, an elongated concave depression in a metal blade, functions to let blood out of the body in order to cause more damage. This misconception has led to fullers becoming widely known as "blood grooves". The fuller is actually a structural reinforcement of the blade similar in design to a metal "I" beam used in construction. However, internal bleeding is just as dangerous as external bleeding; if enough blood vessels are severed to cause serious injury, the skin's elasticity will do nothing to prevent blood from exiting the circulatory system and accumulating uselessly in other parts of the body.

Death from stabbing is caused by shock, severe blood loss, infection, or loss of functioning of an essential organ such as the heart or lungs.

Medical Treatment

Although previously a victim of abdominal stabbing would be subject to exploratory laparotomy, it is now considered safe not to operate if the patient is stable. In that case, he should be observed for signs of decompensation indication a serious injury. In the event that the patient initially presents and is unstable, exploratory laparotomy should be initiated to discover and rectify any internal injury.

Statistics

Stabbings are the most common form of murder in Britain, where firearms — except certain shotguns and sporting rifles — are outlawed.

Of the 839 homicides in England and Wales in 2005, 29% involved sharp instruments including knives, blades and swords. Firearms account for just 9% of murders in Britain. The murder rate in Britain is 15 per million people.

In London alone, there were 12,589 knife-related crimes in 2007. Police say the most likely people to carry knives are males ages 15 to 18.

Numbers of crimes using knives in 2010 across England and Wales fell 4.26%; total 'knife crimes' are recorded by police as 29,259 which is 1,301 less than 2009.

Knife killings totalled 200 in 2010, three more than the 197 recorded in 2009. Attempted murders using knives were dropped by 57 to 206, 22% less than the 263 recorded in 2009.

Knife robberies rose to 14,279 - a 3% increase from recorded knife robberies in 2009 (13,908).

Rapists too seem to favour using knives - 11% increase in rapes with knives from 213 blade rapes in 2009 to 239 last year.

Threats to kill using knives also rose year-on-year in 2010 from 1,419 to 1,454. Gun / firearms crimes dropped 7% last year.

Collection anomalies mean West Midlands police force figures are not included in this analysis. Figures sourced from the UK's Knife Crime Blog from data published by the British Crime Survey and police statistics in England and Wales[1].

See also

References