Crime (also known as Crimes, Kidnapping): A violation of the criminal law, i.e., a breach of the conduct code specifically sanctioned by the state, which through its administrative agencies prosecutes offenders and imposes and administers punishments. The concept includes unacceptable actions whether prosecuted or goin

NIH MeSH · D003415Anthropology, Education, Sociology and Social Phenomena

Crime

Also known asCrimes · Kidnapping · Kidnappings · Poaching

Definition

A violation of the criminal law, i.e., a breach of the conduct code specifically sanctioned by the state, which through its administrative agencies prosecutes offenders and imposes and administers punishments. The concept includes unacceptable actions whether prosecuted or going unpunished.

MeSH classification

  • I01.198.240
  • I01.880.735.191

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Related concepts

Common questions about Crime

What does Crime mean in medicine?
A violation of the criminal law, i.e., a breach of the conduct code specifically sanctioned by the state, which through its administrative agencies prosecutes offenders and imposes and administers punishments. The concept includes unacceptable actions whether prosecuted or going unpunished. This definition is taken from the National Library of Medicine's MeSH (Medical Subject Headings) 2026 release, which is the standard vocabulary used to index PubMed and most medical literature.
Is Crime known by any other names?
Yes. Crime is also referred to as Crimes, Kidnapping, Kidnappings, Poaching in different clinical, research and patient-facing contexts. The MeSH descriptor groups all of these synonyms under a single canonical concept so research and records stay consistent.
Where does Crime sit in the medical classification?
Crime falls under the broader medical category "Anthropology, Education, Sociology and Social Phenomena" in the MeSH hierarchy (tree numbers: I01.198.240, I01.880.735.191). Browsing the related concepts on this page takes you to neighbouring topics in the same branch of medicine.
Where can I get a plain-language explanation of Crime?
For a plain-language explanation of Crime - including symptoms, treatments and what it means for an Indian patient - ask GoDavaii's Health AI. It works in 22+ Indian languages, is free and needs no signup. Tap "Ask GoDavaii AI about Crime" above.

Source: NIH MeSH 2026 (D003415) — National Library of Medicine, public domain. View official MeSH record ↗