You are here

PLEASE NOTE: Sage UK Distribution including UK Books Customer Services will be closed for a stocktake from 27th November to 29th November. This affects only book orders and queries from the UK. Any orders placed during this period; or queries emailed, will be dealt with as normal when service resumes on 2nd December. Thank you for your patience and we apologise for any inconvenience caused.

Share

Press room

Acid attacks: New research reveals unexpected demographics and highlights the need for tighter regulation of corrosive substances

December 1, 2015

London, UK- In a recent study published in the SAGE open access journalScars, Burns & Healing, in affiliation with The Katie Piper Foundation, leading researchers from the St. Andrews Centre for Plastic Surgery and Burns conducted a 15- year retrospective study of twenty-one victims of assault using corrosive substances in order to better understand this method of violence, support the victims, and review current criminal legislative proceedings and preventative legislations in the UK.

Whilst acid attacks within the UK are gaining increased media attention surrounding a concern about rising incidence, the data is reassuring in one sense suggesting that occurrences are in fact remaining generally constant, with an average of 7 attacks taking place every 4 years within the study. They also found that victims were mostly young men, assaulted by male perpetrators, a very different demographic compared to similar attacks in Low and Middle Income countries including India, Iran, Jamaica, Bangladesh and Uganda and Cambodia.

Of concern, the proportion of victims who fully pursued criminal charges against their attacker was very low and only 9 out of twenty-one cases (43%) were criminally investigated. Although the authors felt that there was “no need for any legislative change in the UK, unlike other countries, as the sentencing powers reflect the severity of the crime”, they did mitigate the need to better understand the legal considerations of attacks using corrosive substances in order to better support the victim. The researchers explain:

“As the first point of contact in a protected environment such as in hospital, this may be the only opportunity to provide these patients with a setting in which they may feel ‘safe’ enough to accept help.”  

The authors emphasize that “prevention is key”, and call for tighter regulations around the purchase of corrosive substances. They note that whilst it is impossible to stop the public from purchasing corrosive agents such as heavy-duty drain cleaners, “a legal requirement for sellers to record details of every purchase should be implemented” and state that these measures are “likely to have a significant impact on reducing future rates of these attacks.”

Professor Shokrollahi, Consultant Burns & Plastic Surgeon and Editor-in-Chief of Scars, Burns & Healing further commented: 

“This is a very important paper as there has been very little data and information regarding these types of assaults in the United Kingdom. Whilst there is no evidence of an epidemic, and of the 250,000 burns per annum in the UK these injuries account for less than 1 percent, it is still an alarming problem that we need to address – 21 cases in one burns service is 21 too many. There is a clear need to limit access to corrosive substances in a strategic way, but work needs to be done to ensure limiting access to one substance does not simply result in a shift to a different, more accessible substance.”

  # # #

The article,“Assaults from corrosive substances and medico legal considerations in a large regional burn centre in the United Kingdom: Calls forincreased vigilance and enforced legislation”  by Alethea Tan, Amrit Kaur Bharj, Metin Nizamoglu, David Barnes and Peter Dziewulski, is free to access, download and distribute for non-commercial purposes here.

Professor Shokrollahi recently contributed to a BBC interview discussing the problem of acid attacks victims. The interview, along with perspectives from an acid attack survivor, can be heard here.

# # #

SAGE Founded 50 years ago by Sara Miller McCune to support the dissemination of usable knowledge and educate a global community, SAGE publishes more than 850 journals and over 800 new books each year, spanning a wide range of subject areas. A growing selection of library products includes archives, data and video. SAGE remains majority owned by our founder and after her lifetime will become owned by a charitable trust that secures the company’s continued independence. Principal offices are located in Los Angeles, London, New Delhi, Singapore and Washington DC. www.sagepub.com

Scars, Burns & Healing is a peer reviewed, open access journal affiliated with The Katie Piper Foundation, which brings together the specialist focus of scar and burns research with the breadth of the science and medicine related to healing. Research in diverse fields from tissue engineering to genetics is increasingly brought to bear on scar and burns research improving our understanding of disease in general and paving the way for better treatments. https://uk.sagepub.com/scars-burns-healing

Contact (media inquiries only)

Yearly archive
2020 (12)
2019 (46)
2018 (84)
2017 (97)
2016 (134)
2015 (150)
2014 (145)