3.9 Article

A Chasm Between Injury and Care: Experiences of Black Male Victims of Violence

Journal

JOURNAL OF TRAUMA-INJURY INFECTION AND CRITICAL CARE
Volume 69, Issue 6, Pages 1372-1378

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/TA.0b013e3181e74fcf

Keywords

Black male; Community violence; Qualitative research

Funding

  1. NIDA NIH HHS [K23 DA016665, K23 DA016665-05] Funding Source: Medline

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Background: Despite higher rates of stabbing and shooting violence among black men, healthcare systems have not demonstrated an efficacious response to these patients. This study describes challenges and promotive factors for engaging black male violence victims of violence with medical and mental healthcare. Methods: Black male victims of stabbings and shootings were recruited through fliers and word of mouth, and were interviewed individually (n = 12) or in pairs (n = 4) using a semistructured guide. A racially diverse multidisciplinary team analyzed the data using Grounded Theory methods. Results: Challenges to engagement with healthcare included the following: (1) Disconnect in the aftermath; e. g. participants reported not realizing they were seriously injured (just a scratch poke), were disoriented (did not know where I was), or were consumed with anger. (2) Institutional mistrust: blurred lines between healthcare and police, money-motivated care. (3) Foreshortened future: expectations they would die young. (4) Self-reliance: fix mental and substance abuse issues on their own. (5) Logistical issues: postinjury mental health symptoms, disability, and safety concerns created structural barriers to recovery and engagement with healthcare. Promotive factors included the following: (1) desire professionalism, open personality, and shared experience from clinicians; (2) turning points: injury or birth of a child serve as a wake up call; and (3) positive people, future-oriented friends and family. Conclusions: For black male violence victims, medical treatment did not address circumstances of and reactions to injury. Policies delineating boundaries between medical care and law enforcement and addressing postinjury mental health symptoms, disability, and safety concerns may improve the recovery process.

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