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RIT faculty awarded grant to assist victims of gun violence 

RIT faculty awarded grant to assist victims of gun violence 

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A team of faculty from Rochester Institute of Technology’s Center for Public Safety Initiatives is spearheading a new initiative to address community trauma and health inequity caused by gun violence. Through a $225,000 grant from the Greater Rochester Health Foundation, the team will support the launch of a new one-stop shop in Rochester to provide comprehensive services for victims of gun violence. 

Faculty from RIT’s Department of Criminal Justice received a grant to launch a new one-stop shop at the Jordan Health Center to provide comprehensive services for victims of gun violence. Photo credit: Jordan Health

Jordan Health will serve as the central hub and is working with the United Way Systems Integration Project to coordinate services through other community partners, including Pathways to Peace, Rochester SNUG, Rise Up Rochester, Advance Peace, Ubuntu Village Works and the City of Rochester Mayor’s Office.  

The initiative, led by principal investigator Associate Professor Irshad Altheimer and Assistant Research Professor Janelle Duda-Banwar, will provide victims the support they need to help stabilize their lives and avoid further violence. 

“We’re hoping this can be a national model for helping victims deal with the trauma after they get medical care,” Altheimer said. “We hope that by dealing with the trauma, we can lower the victimization and retaliation that often happens after a shooting.” 

The initiative builds on a decade of research by RIT’s Center for Public Safety Initiatives and the Community Engagement to Reduce Victimization project, where researchers conducted customer journey mapping interviews with victims of violence in the Rochester community. 

Their research found that shooting victims are often discharged from the hospital in less than four hours and systemically shut out of follow-up services. 

The researchers noted that the arrest rate for nonfatal shootings in Rochester over the past 20 years is only about 20 percent. They said that while the rate needs to increase and there must be a law enforcement component to address the problem, coordinated services offered through a trusted community partner like Jordan Health can help tackle the issue from a different perspective. 

Organizers expect to begin piloting the program in May or June and hope to have it fully operational by the end of summer.

For more information, go to the Center for Public Safety Initiatives website. 

[email protected] / (585) 653-4021 

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