Innovation Forums: Big Ideas to Curb Community Violence

Regenstrief Institute

INDIANAPOLIS – Community violence impacts health and wellbeing, disrupting and harming lives and neighborhoods. Community violence is an extremely complex problem which has eluded solution.

Because big ideas to mitigate violence and make communities safer and healthier are urgently needed, a new study from Regenstrief Institute and the Indiana University School of Medicine researchers presents the use of innovation forums, held virtually with participants from the community, healthcare and local government to highlight priorities, recommend strategies and identify innovative solutions to counter community violence. In the study 10 groups of innovation forum participants generated 162 potential solutions to community violence.

Among the recurring themes were:

  • limiting gun access.
  • changing policies to decrease school expulsions of children who become involved in the criminal justice system to provide alternate paths for them that include education.
  • limiting promotion of risk factors such as alcohol use.
  • increasing the capacity of federally qualified (also known as safety net) health centers.
  • altering policies related to affordable housing.
  • increasing employment, vocational skills and trade programs.

An overarching big idea that emerged from these innovation forums focused on changing the narrative about community violence by:

  • creating media campaigns to destigmatize victims of violence.
  • exploring avenues to extinguish misconceptions about violence being produced by individuals with mental illness.
  • making policy evidence based.

The innovation forum model was developed by researchers from Regenstrief Institute and the IU School of Medicine to focus on solution generation by those impacted by a perplexing problem. While this study's innovation forums focused on violence in Indianapolis, a city that is larger than San Francisco, Seattle, Denver, Boston or Detroit, the methodology could be utilized by any community to address violence, says study senior author Malaz Boustani, M.D., MPH. He notes that it could also be employed to address other problems. The first application of the innovation forum concept was by Dr. Boustani, who is an aging researcher, geriatrician and agile scientist, to build the Indianapolis Discovery Network for Dementia to improve dementia care.

"The health and the safety of the community is the number one priority," he said. "In our new study we found that using innovation forums and actually listening to the community and getting to know the local context of violence by being involved with the people who are living the problems and seeking their help and their solutions in a diversified voice, is crucial for generating solutions that might make the future of Indianapolis much brighter.

"This project was called the Big Idea because big problems require big solutions. We learned there was a sense that efforts have been siloed and that if there was collaboration to bring efforts to the community, they would be more effective. Utilizing innovation forums, which focus solely on solution generation, provided multiple intertwined lines to create big ideas."

Further dissemination of information on countering and preventing community violence, acquired during the process, is planned.

"As a trauma surgeon I see the results of community violence all the time. In addition to physically caring for these patients, I try to connect them to resources that can help them change their lives, recover and avoid this from happening again, but that's not enough" said study first author Damaris Ortiz, M.D., of the IU School of Medicine and the medical director of Prescription for Hope, a program for patients recovering from a violence-related injury such as a gunshot, stabbing or assault being treated at Eskenazi Health, which has a number of sites that are federally qualified health centers.

"In our study the majority of solutions proposed were not novel. But they were the ones that the innovation forum participants who were living the problem in different spaces across the community, healthcare and government want as solutions -- intensive service opportunities and the creation of protective environments."

" A qualitative analysis of innovation forums for community violence prevention: the Big Idea " is published in the peer-reviewed journal Discover Public Health. The study received support from the IU School of Medicine, Eskenazi Health and the City of Indianapolis Office of Public Health and Safety.

Authors and affiliations as listed in the publication:

Damaris Ortiz1,2 · Courtney Casbon1 · Samantha Padgett2 · Ashley Overley2,3,4 · Lauren A. Magee5 ·Zachary W. Adams4 · Ashley D. Meagher1 · Matthew P. Landman1,6 · Tiffany Davis7 · Jessica Belchos8 · Erik W. Streib1,2 · Malaz Boustani9,10, 11

1Department of Surgery, Indiana University School of Medicine

2Sidney & Lois Eskenazi Hospital Smith Level One Trauma Center

3Sandra Eskenazi Mental Health Center

4Department of Psychiatry, Indiana University School of Medicine

5Paul H. O'Neill School of Public and Environmental Affairs, Indiana University Indianapolis

6Riley Children's Health, Indiana University Health

7IU Health Methodist Hospital

8Ascension St. Vincent Indianapolis

9Center of Health Innovation and Implementation Science, Center for Translational Science and Innovation

10Department of Medicine, Indiana University School of Medicine

11Regenstrief Institute

Malaz Boustani, M.D., MPH

In addition to his role as a research scientist with the Indiana University Center for Aging Research at Regenstrief Institute, Malaz Boustani, M.D., MPH, is the founding director of the Center for Health Innovation and Implementation Science. He is a professor and holds the Richard M. Fairbanks Chair of Aging Research at the Indiana University School of Medicine. Dr. Boustani is also director of care innovation at Eskenazi Health.

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