something about tasers

Kejtar

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Recent medical studies hail the safe use of conducted energy weapons
By Darrell L. Ross, Ph.D.

The use of the TASER®, conducted energy weapons (CEWs) has increased in popularity among law enforcement and correctional agencies. Presently over 8,000 law enforcement departments utilize them (TASER International, 2007). However, since there have been a number of sudden deaths and injuries of arrestees following deployment of the TASER, numerous concerns have emerged regarding the safe use of the device. Questions regarding the safety of CWEs have prompted several research projects. Because the use of the TASER has increased over the use of oleoresin capsicum and impact weapons, a review of recent research is important.

In 2005 the Canadian Police Research Centre released a report entitled, “Review of Conducted Energy Devices,” which analyzed 15 studies regarding the medical safety of the use of CEWs. Their research did not present evidence that implicated a causal relationship between the use of CEWs and death; that existing studies indicate that the risk of cardiac harm to subjects from CEW is very low; and the impact of CEWs on respiration, pH levels, and other associated physical effects, offers a plausible theory on the possible connection between deaths, CEWs use, and people exhibiting the symptoms of excited delirium. The researchers concluded that CEWs are effective tools with a low risk of harm to the subject.

In 2006 Stroke and Huston, published a medical case series article which analyzed 37 autopsy reports of decedents who died after exposure to the TASER® from 2001 to 2005. All of the subjects were men, ranging between the ages of 18 to 50 years. Cardiovascular disease was found in 54%, illegal substances were found by toxicology screening in 78%, and 86% within that group were found to have been using stimulants. Excited delirium was determined in 76% of the cases. The use of the TASER was considered a potential or contributory cause of death in 27%. This research was the largest and the second study to analyze autopsy reports of those exposed to CEW applications. Kornblum and Reddy (1991) studied 16 deaths after the use of the TASER and found no causal factor of death associated with its use. Stroke and Huston concluded that those that died after the use of the TASER are individuals who were already at a high risk for sudden deaths, particularly those who are exhibiting extreme agitation, those with a history of stimulant drug use, and those with preexisting heart disease.

Ho et al. (2006) performed a medical study for TASER International which assessed the effects of the TASER on human subjects. The researchers were unable to detect, following a 5 second TASER exposure in a healthy population, any induced dysrthymias or cardiac cellular damage that could be related to sudden death, They did report, however, blood pH, and metabolic acidosis could increase the risk of cardiac arrest.

Chan et al. (2006) exposed 32 subjects to a 1.5 second cycle shock to the TASER. Prior to exposure, the subjects’ baseline measurements were taken. All of the subjects were monitored for six hours after the exposure. They found no evidence of hypoxemia or hypoventilation. Further, they found a moderate increase in respiratory rate for ten minutes but found no significant clinical changes in cardiovascular rates. Changes in blood levels were not evidenced.

Bouton et al. (2006) exposed 21 law enforcement academy cadets to one, 5 second TASER application and monitored their physiological stress, ventilatory and blood pH for one hour after exposure. Baseline measurements were taken prior to the TASER application. The main finding of the research indicated that a 5 second TASER application did not cause clinically significant physiological stress. Respiratory rates increased mildly for a brief time. Changes in ventilatory and blood measures increased no more than what is expected during moderate exercise. The researchers concluded that a 5 second TASER exposure did not cause clinically significant indications of physiological stress that could be causally linked to sudden death.

Ross (2007) analyzed 47 autopsy reports from 20 states from 1999 to 2006 of individuals who died after exposure to the TASER. Of these incidents, 85% occurred in a street arrest situation and 15% occurred in jail. All of the decedents were men, 54% were white, and the average age was 35 years. Heart disease was found in 85%, 65% had an enlarged heart, and 35% exhibited other internal organ abnormalities. On average the TASER was applied in 2 cycles of 5 second intervals. In 75% of the cases the cause of death was due to cardiac arrest due to drugs and excited delirium and 10% of the deaths were caused by acute exhaustive mania. No direct linkage to the use of TASER was correlated to the cause of death.

Ross (2007) also analyzed 75 police agency reports from 22 states on the applications of the TASER in 34,000 arrests from 2002 to 2006. Of these arrests the TASER was deployed in 6,010 or 18%. The agencies reported that suspect injuries decreased by 66%, minor injuries were sustained in 35% of the arrests, and officer injuries declined by 58%. The effective rate of the use of the TASER was observed in 94%. On average lethal force incidents declined by 48%, excessive force lawsuits declined by 52%, citizen complaints declined by 52%, and no deaths were reported.

The most recent medical study researching the injury potential of using the TASER was performed by Bozeman et al. (10/2007) from the Wake Forest Medical School. The Department of Justice funded the study for the purpose of performing the first large, independent study which assessed the injury and severity of injury after exposure to the TASER. A multicenter cohort study was conducted at six police agencies across the country. All arrestees exposed to the TASER were included in the study from July 2005 to June 2007 which totaled 962. A tactical physician at each agency reviewed police records and medical records for each case.

Injuries were classified as mild (outpatient treatment), moderate (short-term inpatient treatment), or severe (long-term inpatient treatment). Subjects mean age was 32 years and 94% were male. The mean number of shocks delivered was 1.6 in the probe mode and 1.8 in the drive stun mode. Findings of the research reveal that: 99.7% of the subjects sustained no injuries or mild injuries; skin punctures from the TASER probes, contusions and lacerations account for 98.5% of mild injuries; and the back, chest and the abdomen/pelvis areas represented 76% of the body impact areas. During the study, two in-custody deaths occurred. Neither death occurred immediately after the TASER was deployed and the autopsy showed that both deaths were unrelated to the TASER. Only 3 cases (0.3%) were classified as severe requiring hospitalization, including: 1 case of rhabdomolysis, 1 case of cerebral contusion, and 1 case of epidural hematoma. The researchers concluded that the findings support the safety of TASER use by law enforcement.

While these studies do not represent all medical research on the subject they do reveal emerging significant findings. All but one of the studies involved independent research. What is important about these studies is that they have moved past studying the effect of the TASER on animals and have researched its impact on humans. The Bozeman et al., Ross, and Ho et al. studies analyzed incidents from actual field applications. The Bozeman et al. study is particularly noteworthy as it applied a longitudinal design with multiple sites with almost 1,000 suspects. The study shows that the injury potential of using the TASER is statistically insignificant supporting its safe usage.

The collective findings of all of these studies support the fact that the TASER is not causally linked to sudden deaths of suspects, that there is an extremely low risk of injury to a suspect, and that there is no evidence that it causes cardiovascular effects linking it to sudden death. This is not to suggest that the TASER is totally risk free. While rare, there have been limited significant injuries sustained after the use of the TASER. These studies, however, are important as they underscore the initial development of the TASER, in that it was designed to safely control resisting subjects by decreasing the injury potential for the subject and the officer. Officers using the TASER are encouraged to closely follow their training, policy, and use of force legal standards in a continued effort to maximize its continued safe application.
 
Reports say what I've been thinking - if someone is killed proximately by TASER use, there are probably underlying causes (pharmacological or physiological.) If you are killed by a TASER, you would probably have been killed by pretty much any other significant electrical event - probably because your heart was going silly already - either due to "cardiac disease" or through chemical tampering (stimulants, narcotics, et al.)

It's just nice to see a report based on more than "gut feeling" coming around. I do wonder what discipline he holds his doctorate in, tho...
 
5-90 said:
Reports say what I've been thinking - if someone is killed proximately by TASER use, there are probably underlying causes (pharmacological or physiological.) If you are killed by a TASER, you would probably have been killed by pretty much any other significant electrical event - probably because your heart was going silly already - either due to "cardiac disease" or through chemical tampering (stimulants, narcotics, et al.)

It's just nice to see a report based on more than "gut feeling" coming around. I do wonder what discipline he holds his doctorate in, tho...
there are couple more reports and researches that were done that I've read throughout the past year and a half, I just don't have them handy. This one happened to have come up so I figured I'd pass it on. Also what's worth mentioning in regards for the Taser's ability to "kill". Those familiar with electricity (college physics classes, electricians and so on) know that it is not the voltage but the current that is the real killer. The 12 volts car battery is capable of injuring, even kill you as it's not the volts but rather the amps delivered that are dangerous.
 
Kejtar said:
there are couple more reports and researches that were done that I've read throughout the past year and a half, I just don't have them handy. This one happened to have come up so I figured I'd pass it on. Also what's worth mentioning in regards for the Taser's ability to "kill". Those familiar with electricity (college physics classes, electricians and so on) know that it is not the voltage but the current that is the real killer. The 12 volts car battery is capable of injuring, even kill you as it's not the volts but rather the amps delivered that are dangerous.

Yah - even those with a passing familiarity with electricity (those hobbyists who have been "bitten" or "zapped" while working...) have probably figured that out. Getting nailed by a 440V line smarts, but it doesn't necessarily kill you. Unless it's a hot day and you're sweating a lot (reducing resistance, increasing current in the circuit.)

Where you're zapped also has a lot to do with injuries sustained - that's why you'll see a lot of older electricians grabbing the back of their belt with one hand while they work. Reason? It keeps the heart "out of the circuit" if they get nailed. This reduces the risk of getting killed outright (doesn't eliminate it entirely, but it does reduce it.)

This probably does point up one small problem with the TASER - it's used like a pistol, and people are trained during pistol marksmanship to aim for "centre mass" - the bulk of the torso. Still, the current involved is minimal - if it kills you, it was very likely you had other problems as well. I'm not going to say "you were going to die anyhow," but your general survivability was rather lower due to underlying causes that didn't involve electrical discharges in general.
 
I'm sorry but I consider the taser to be a possibly deadly weapon, maybe not instantaneous but a device that does what that does to you cannot be good for your body. I've seen people hit by normal household current get up walk around and be fine, then fall over dead two hours later. The problem is that law enforcement has been lead to believe that they are harmless and this is demonstrated in every taser class by one or six 'volunteers', generally police in good physical shape and with no health issues and fully paid health care that eat healthy meals and for the most part are nutritionally good.
Take someone of a criminal nature and all bets are off.
 
I think there is little doubt that the taser is a useful and reasonable alternative to other forms of force, combining as it does relative safety with effectiveness., and I have no doubt that in general, its use has been beneficial in terms of how many people are killed or badly injured.

But that does not by itself address the occasional misuse of it, and the fact that most people who die of tasering turn out to have had bad hearts is not exactly a vindication of the taser either, if you think about it. Many people have bad hearts, and perhaps they'll even be dead in a few years. This does not entirely absolve you of responsibility for killing them today, unless there is simply no alternative. The possibility that a person is unhealthy, while it wouldn't be a good enough reason for a law officer to risk his own life or that of others, must still be a part of the decision.

I don't doubt that the taser is a very useful tool, but its relative safety should not make it a high tech substitute for a rubber hose, either.
 
RichP said:
I'm sorry but I consider the taser to be a possibly deadly weapon, maybe not instantaneous but a device that does what that does to you cannot be good for your body. I've seen people hit by normal household current get up walk around and be fine, then fall over dead two hours later.
Very possible reasons for that are the same ones that are attributed to the taser related deaths.
 
Matthew Currie said:
I don't doubt that the taser is a very useful tool, but its relative safety should not make it a high tech substitute for a rubber hose, either.

You are confusing a rubber hose with a cattle prod :D :D :D
 
Matthew Currie said:
But that does not by itself address the occasional misuse of it, and the fact that most people who die of tasering turn out to have had bad hearts is not exactly a vindication of the taser either, if you think about it. Many people have bad hearts, and perhaps they'll even be dead in a few years.
So if someone scares someone into a heart attack is that manslaughter?

I don't doubt that the taser is a very useful tool, but its relative safety should not make it a high tech substitute for a rubber hose, either.
Honestely I would rather be hit with a taser then a rubber hose.
 
RichP said:
I'm sorry but I consider the taser to be a possibly deadly weapon, maybe not instantaneous but a device that does what that does to you cannot be good for your body. I've seen people hit by normal household current get up walk around and be fine, then fall over dead two hours later. The problem is that law enforcement has been lead to believe that they are harmless and this is demonstrated in every taser class by one or six 'volunteers', generally police in good physical shape and with no health issues and fully paid health care that eat healthy meals and for the most part are nutritionally good.
Take someone of a criminal nature and all bets are off.

No argument here - that's why I (and quite a few departments) call options like that "Less Lethal" instead of "Non-lethal." You can kill a person with an amazing array of goodies - and it's just another example of calling a spade a spade.

With "less lethal," that just means that using it is less likely to kill someone. People have been killed with riot control rounds - stingballs, beanbags, and baton shells - but they were called "non-lethal" for the longest.

It's kind of like the shift from AD (accidental discharge) to ND (negligent discharge) with firearms training - if you didn't mean for your firearm to discharge and it does, dollars to doughnuts say you did something wrong. I think the number of truly "accidental" firearms discharges in the last fifty years can be accurately counted on the fingers of one nose.

Can electricity kill? Certainly. Can the odds of the same discharge killing people change by health, circumstances, et al? Certainly.

There honestly is no such thing as a "non lethal" weapon, if you ask me. It's just a weapon that is designed to minimise the risk of killing the target - but it's always possible. You can put someone in a "pain compliance" hold and kill them - due to a weak heart and an ensuing "cardiac event." Does this mean that pain compliance holds should not be used? Riddle me that...

Of course, the simplest thing is to conduct yourself in a manner that you are not going to be subject to such things - but people aren't huge fans of "simple," I've noticed...
 
Kejtar said:
So if someone scares someone into a heart attack is that manslaughter?
I never said that. Just that it's a factor that needs to be considered, even if it isn't the first factor. But I would guess that if someone tasered you into a heart attack, when the tasering was unnecessary, then why shouldn't it be manslaughter? If you're threatening a police officer with harm and he tasers you and you drop dead, it's your tough luck. If he tasers you in your jail cell and you drop dead, it's a different story.
Honestely I would rather be hit with a taser then a rubber hose.
Undoubtedly, but my point is simply that it seems from occasional news reports that some overzealous officers have taken to using the taser when it isn't really justified, because it is presumed safe. Of course, I'm sure that this is the exception rather than the rule, but it's what the public hears about - the instances where people are tasered not because they are a threat, but because they are obnoxious, uncooperative or verbally abusive, etc.

It would be a shame if such a useful and relatively safe tool ended up being banned or limited because its very safety invites misuse.
 
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