Britain reassesses 'flawed' domestic abuse risk tool
SafeLives leads government-backed review of DASH tool after studies found 96.3% of high-risk domestic abuse cases were underestimated, contributing to failures in victim protection.
- This year, the UK government tasked SafeLives charity with reviewing the DASH risk assessment tool, which has been used for more than 15 years, according to the charity.
- Researchers from the Universities of Manchester and Seville found DASH 'performs poorly at identifying high-risk victims', misclassifying 350,000 incidents in a major UK police force study.
- Despite threats to kill her, Bethany Fields reported her ex-boyfriend’s abusive behavior to police, but was not assessed as high risk, says the IOPC report published this year.
- Officials called for enhanced training and tools, as Assistant Chief Constable Claire Bell urged `Police officers must be supported with the right training and tools to identify offences and protect victims`.
- In the year ending March 2024, 83 of 108 domestic homicides involved female victims, and Fawziyah Javed was misclassified as medium risk six days before her death, costing lives.
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Britain reassesses 'flawed' domestic abuse risk tool
A month before she was stabbed to death by her ex-boyfriend, Bethany Fields walked into a police station in northern England to report his abusive and controlling behaviour. He had threatened to kill her, but she was not assessed as high risk.
·United Kingdom
Read Full ArticleThe Flawed Formula: Rethinking Domestic Abuse Risk Assessments
Bethany Fields' tragic death highlights systemic flaws in Britain's DASH risk assessment tool for domestic abuse. Despite red flags, Fields wasn't deemed high-risk. Recent studies suggest a high failure rate in identifying true danger, sparking a government review and potential overhaul of the DASH system to better protect victims.
·India
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Total News Sources7
Leaning Left0Leaning Right1Center5Last UpdatedBias Distribution83% Center
Bias Distribution
- 83% of the sources are Center
83% Center
C 83%
R 17%
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