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A collaborative effort of CAWC and
the Cook County Bureau of Health Services, HCIP provides direct
services to victims of abuse at the John H. Stroger, Jr. Hospital of Cook County. HCIP also
trains health care providers in identification, assessment and
referral of patients who are victims of domestic violence. Since
HCIP's beginnings as a model for hospital-based domestic violence
programs in 1993, we have responded to over 4,000 referrals and have
provided over 2,000 battered women with crisis intervention,
individual counseling, safety planning, access to emergency
shelters, legal and systems advocacy, and referrals to other
essential resources. Over 98% of HCIP clients live below the
national poverty index and have little access to other sources of
healing and support.
HCIP was the first program of its
kind to be founded in a public hospital and continues to provide
essential services to battered women and training to clinicians. In
1994, President Clinton awarded HCIP's co-founder the National Crime
Victims Service Award.
HCIP supports and informs research
partnerships with eminent academic, governmental and scientific
entities. These studies seek to increase our understanding of the
dynamics of domestic violence. From 1997 until 2000, HCIP was a
collaborative partner with the Women's Health Risk Study, a
longitudinal research project designed to identify risk factors for
serious injury or death in intimate partner violence. HCIP serves as
liaison to John H. Stroger, Jr. Hospital of Cook County for this project which is led by the
Illinois Criminal Justice Information Authority with funding from
the National Institutes of Justice.
For five consecutive years, the
co-founders and staff of HCIP designed and taught a ten-week course
on domestic violence at the University of Chicago's Pritzker School
of Medicine. This innovative advocacy-based curriculum is the most
extensive course on domestic violence taught in the
U.S. |