'Wraparound' support stops revolving door of violent injuries
Darius Irvin grew up in violent neighborhoods in Oakland and San Francisco. Nearly three years ago, he was rushed to the San Francisco General Hospital鈥檚 emergency department with nine gunshot wounds.
Irvin survived what was his third shooting in a little more than three years. He still visits the hospital. Not as a patient, but as a mentor counseling at-risk youth to avoid guns and gangs. The hospital鈥檚 鈥淲raparound鈥 violence-intervention program has helped keep the 26-year-old Irvin and other former victims of gun violence out of the line of fire.
Today, Irvin is a sophomore at San Francisco State College 鈥 and he credits the hospital鈥檚 outreach for helping him navigate his way toward a more stable and productive life.
鈥淚鈥檝e got a lot of love in my heart for the hospital and for Wraparound,鈥 he says. 鈥淭hey showed me I had a chance of being someone.鈥
Since its inception in 2006, the program has provided some 750 clients with 鈥榳raparound鈥 support like mentorship, job training, assistance with court advocacy, transfer to safer schools and connections to mental health services.
After the doctors finished stitching patients鈥 wounds, case managers visit them at the bedside. Case managers come from the same communities as their clients and share similar experiences.
They start a conversation 鈥 mostly small talk at first. In Irvin鈥檚 case, it was about his love for Popeye鈥檚 chicken. Later, case managers assess the victim鈥檚 background and provide customized therapy for up to six months in partnership with a range of community-based organizations.
Case manager Mike Tejada intervened with Irvin as he woke up in the hospital and realized he was still alive. Tejada has been a Wraparound case manager for nearly 11 years 鈥 motivated in part by the fact that five family members succumbed to gun violence over a two-year period.
鈥淲e call it the teachable moment,鈥 Tejada says of the bedside intervention. 鈥淭here is no negativity at that point. We focus on the positive things, starting with the fact that they survived. You take them by the hand and let them know of their own potential.鈥
Gun violence is responsible for more than 33,000 deaths and 84,000 injuries a year, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. While many victims don鈥檛 make it to a hospital alive or die before getting discharged, others survive and go back into violent neighborhoods where they are reinjured or killed, often in retaliation or from continued criminal activity.
The days the patient is in the hospital and away from the streets and their friends 鈥渋s when they are open and vulnerable to making changes,鈥 says trauma surgeon Rochelle Dicker. She founded Wraparound after repairing one youth鈥檚 gunshot wounds, only to see him readmitted a month later.
The program, which has treated patients from ages 10 to 30, has shown positive results.
For example, the return visit rate for violent injuries at the hospital has fallen from 16% to 4.5%, and Dicker says studies show it results in annual savings of $2.6 million in direct medical costs.
Her biggest reward is 鈥渘ot just that we are sending people out of the hospital alive. They are actually thriving because they get the support they deserve.鈥
Dicker says hospitals and health systems need to address gun violence in their communities as a public health issue, like they would treat a chronic illness. 鈥淒iseases have risk and preventive factors, and violent injury is no different,鈥 she says.
Programs like Wraparound are expanding across the country as more hospitals and health systems recognize the importance of applying public health interventions to curb gun violence in their communities.
For instance, Boston-based Brigham and Women鈥檚 Hospital (BWH) launched a violence-intervention program six years ago, partly in response to statistics showing violence to be the city鈥檚 leading cause of death for black and Latino males between ages 15 and 35.
At BWH, 鈥渧iolence recovery鈥 advocates work with about 125 patients a year. They talk about the events that led to the violence, and set up safety plans to help keep patients safe as they transition back into the community. Advocates reach out to support groups and attend court hearings, housing appointments and job interviews with patients.
鈥淲e have to come at this from a different framework,鈥 says program director Mardi Chadwick. 鈥淚nstead of asking, 鈥榳hat is wrong with you, ask what has happened to you,鈥 and see trauma through the eyes of the victim.鈥
Seattle鈥檚 Harborview Medical Center last year started a gun violence-intervention project modeled on a screening and counseling program for alcohol abuse it developed in the mid-1990s. After medical staff treat patients鈥 gunshot wounds, social workers interview them and brainstorm reasons to avoid high-risk behaviors. They meet with victims鈥 families and analyze the role of guns in victims鈥 lives over 12 sessions, developing strategies for anger management and resolving conflict.
When patients leave the hospital, case managers follow their progress over six months. They meet with local community agencies a few times each month to determine what nonmedical services can aid in the intervention.
鈥淲e need to be more involved with prevention, in addition to just treating their immediate problem,鈥 says project director Ali Rowhani-Rahbar, M.D. 鈥淲hen patients are in the hospital, we are at a critical point in their lives where we can intervene and hopefully begin to make a difference.鈥
Back in San Francisco, gunshot survivor Irvin hopes he can make a difference by counseling other victims of violence at the hospital and in the community.
鈥淚f I save four or five lives, that would be powerful,鈥 he says.
Learn more about how hospitals and health systems are combatting violence in their communities at the AHA鈥檚 鈥淗ospitals Against Violence鈥 page.