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JCATOM

Absquatulating with the folderol.
Articles Posted: 10  Links Seeded: 1427
Member Since: 4/2008  Last Seen: 5/16/2012

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Surgeon Heals Patients and Their Violent Ways

Seeded on Mon Mar 30, 2009 10:13 AM EDT
Read ArticleArticle Source: CNN
us-news, crime, police, law, drugs, treatment, medical, success, psychology, prison, drug, criminal, violent-crime, theft, defense, jail, doctor, gun, judge, suspect, robbery, duke, drug-war, mental, illness, punishment, disorder, self-defense, shock, result, trauma, yale, thief, weapon, penalty, rob, drug-abuse, robber, physician, defend, judgment, armed, altruism, vip, penalties, robbers, defensive, robbing, vocational-training, job-skills, discretion, imprison, hospital-based-anti-violence-program, shock-trauma-unit, university-of-maryland-medical-center, violence-intervention-program, violence-prevention-program, violent-trauma
Seeded by JCAtom
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Cooper created the Violence Intervention Program (VIP) at the Shock Trauma Unit of the University of Maryland Medical Center, the state's busiest hospital for violent injuries. It became one of the country's first hospital-based anti-violence programs.

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  • Groups: Activism, altruism, America's Need For Change, Bettering America, Caregivers, Centervine, Daily Did You Know?, EthosPress, HealthVine, Ideas for World Peace, Logic on the Vine, Newsvine Optimist Club, Open Mic, Open Minded, Personal Development & Growth, Psych, Soc, Philos, rationalists, Sociology, Stop Hate, Successful Solutions, Sweeter Fennel, To MSNBC, Worldviews
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JCAtom

"We approached this problem like any public health crisis, like heart disease or smoking," he said. "We tried to work on the root causes."

Since 1998, VIP has provided substance abuse counseling, job skills training and other support services to nearly 500 trauma victims.

"Using that scalpel blade to save their life is the first step," Cooper said. "The next step is to try to keep them from coming back."

A 2006 study by Cooper and his colleagues, published in the Journal of Trauma, showed that people in the program were six times less likely to be readmitted with a violent injury and three times less likely to be arrested for a violent crime.

  • 1 vote
Reply#1 - Mon Mar 30, 2009 10:15 AM EDT
0pinion8ed

Saw this story last night on CNN. Was wonderful that somebody is using their heads for something besides butting against a wall. Thinking outside the box. Admirable results. I love a person with no give-up in them. Refusing to accept the judgment of "nothing we can do".

Would love to see more of this thru CNN's "Hero's" from all the really-caring and effective people we have in our country that have the insight and ability to really make changes.

  • 2 votes
Reply#2 - Mon Mar 30, 2009 11:00 AM EDT
Lew-838518

Great story , nice to see something positive for a change . My dad was a general surgeon and had to cover the ER every other weekend for years when I was growing up . He always did the follow-ups and retired with a perfect record ( no malpractice suits ) . Being an ER doctor today must be 10X more difficult than it was then . I know for damn sure I couldn't handle it .

  • 1 vote
Reply#3 - Mon Mar 30, 2009 1:17 PM EDT
Nic-24

Great story. Programs like this are vital if we are to stop the cycle of violence and poverty.

  • 1 vote
Reply#4 - Mon Mar 30, 2009 2:12 PM EDT
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