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Health Departments Help Build Local Capacity to Prevent Family Violence
Polly C. Paulson, M.P.H., M.A.
Epidemiology and Prevention for Injury Control (EPIC) Branch
California Department of Health Services
| Background | FVPSP Grants Allowed Local
Health Departments to Get Creative | Planning Dividends: Related Grantee
Accomplishments | The Future of
Family Violence Strategic Planning | Summary | References
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All too often, family violence can lead to injury and death, but that is only part of the
problem. Family violence can fill our safest haven—the home—with an atmosphere of dread
that destroys health and emotional well being. Children growing up in violent families are
often affected psychologically for many years, if not for a lifetime. The child who begins as
a victim can end up a perpetrator, and the deadly legacy is passed on to a new generation.
Identifying ways to break the cycle of family violence has long been a goal of the California
Department of Health Services (CDHS),
Epidemiology and Prevention for Injury Control (EPIC) Branch. Government
actions affect individuals and families in endless ways, and the question of what role a health
department can play is not simple, especially when it focuses on trying to define what constitutes
“local public health capacity in violence prevention.” Accordingly, EPIC staff decided the
best approach to capacity building would be to offer local public health leaders “think time” to
weigh local issues and to devise community-led solutions. This was based on our experience and
the literature that has shown that “funders often do not provide financial support for…early
stages of the development process, making it difficult to establish the foundation necessary to
sustain partnerships and systematically plan collaborative initiatives.”1
Over the last 13 years, EPIC has provided grants to 28 county and 3 city health departments to
help them build capacity for violence prevention (see map). In this EPICgram we describe some
of the key outcomes that lend to program successes across the state.

Figure 1. Violence Prevention Capacity Building Projects funded by the EPIC Branch,
1990-2003: Alameda, City of Berkeley, Butte, Contra Costa, El Dorado, Fresno, Glenn, Humboldt,
Imperial, Kern, Lake, City of Long Beach, Los Angeles, Marin, Mendocino, Merced, Monterey, City of
Pasadena, Placer, Sacramento, San Diego, San Francisco, San Joaquin, San Mateo, Santa Barbara,
Solano, Sonoma, Stanislaus, Tulare, Ventura, and Yuba.
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Background
In the first seven years of the grant-making program (1990-1997), EPIC funded nine Violent Injury
Prevention (VIP) projects in counties with high
rates of youth homicide. The purpose of this “seed money” was to develop local leadership
and promote public health approaches to prevention of all forms of violence, including family
violence. The grants were funded for an unusually long period, from four to seven years, to
give local health departments enough time to firmly establish injury prevention programming within
their jurisdictions. Grants helped local health departments gather and analyze local data,
develop coalitions for planning and consensus building, and implement new interventions.
By 1997, six of the nine grantees had created a permanent violence prevention unit within their
health departments and developed strong community programs. For example, the Los Angeles
project fostered the development of a countywide VIP Coalition with more than 500 member
organizations. In San Francisco, the health department used the VIP seed money to lay the
groundwork for a reporting system for violent injuries. This San Francisco Violent Injury
Reporting System (SFVIRS)
proved so successful that the Harvard School of Public Health selected San Francisco to participate
in a five-year multi-site pilot on violent injury death reporting. As a result of the pilot,
the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention is building a National Violent Death Reporting
System.
In 1998, funds were becoming scarce, but EPIC was still able to offer smaller grants to
jurisdictions to work specifically on family violence prevention strategic planning and coalition
building. This Family Violence Prevention Strategic Planning (FVPSP) project was based on the VIP
experience. Once again, local health departments welcomed the opportunity to take a leadership
role in crafting local solutions to family violence.
Infusing Violence Prevention into Existing Programs
Along with providing grants to local health departments, EPIC has encouraged violence
prevention work in city governments. For example, through a partnership with the California
Healthy Cities Project, EPIC provided small grants to two Healthy Cities to carry out violent
injury prevention projects in 1996-1997. Each of these projects was successful in creative and
noteworthy ways: the City of Oceanside created a community-led nonprofit organization so
fundraising could be conducted for violence prevention activities. The City of Chico incorporated
conflict resolution training in all elementary and middle schools.
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FVPSP Grants
Allowed Local Health Departments to Get Creative
With primary prevention as the goal, many of the FVPSP strategic plans developed recommendations
to reduce risks for family violence, such as:
- Outreach to men who seek health and social services who may also have suffered from family
violence. (Fresno)
- Inclusion of older adult collaborative as part of outreach education. (Kern)
- Establish “Grandmother’s Houses” or safe havens where someone could just drop in and
feel safe and accepted. (Lake)
- Conduct training for teens to promote healthy dating. (Fresno)
- Train service providers to increase their cultural competence as it relates to working with
families on violence prevention. (Ventura)
- Target animal control officers and animal shelter staff regarding collaboration on identifying
family violence perpetrators. (Humboldt)
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Planning Dividends: Related
Grantee Accomplishments
In the process of developing their plans, the FVPSP grantees also succeeded in building local
capacity. For example, projects were able to:
- Systematically review each service system related to family violence.
- Improve mechanisms for data collection; for example, improve law enforcement identification of
child witnesses during domestic violence incidents. This in turn shaped education and
intervention strategies.
- Update related action plans.
- Incorporate injury prevention strategies into existing services through coordinated efforts,
such as one-stop resource centers, education of providers, and dissemination of information and
referral resources to clients.
Grantees also succeeded in bringing together various governmental and community groups to work on
violence prevention. Accomplishments in coalition building included:
- Improved data collection and sharing among agencies. (most grantees)
- Increased overall communication among agencies and community groups (all grantees)
- Increased participation of local courts in coalitions. (Imperial)
- Reached consensus on a common definition of “family violence”. (all grantees)
- Enhanced community perception of Public Health as a “key player” in community violence
prevention. (all grantees)
- Enhanced cooperation across jurisdictions. (all grantees)
- Provided training for coalition members on media advocacy and social marketing. (Sonoma)
- Created alliances and partnerships, which flourished after the funding period ended. (all
grantees)
The FVPSP grants set in motion some changes that no one foresaw. Here are some examples of
new entities and positions that were also created:
- A Domestic Violence Unit in a district attorney’s office. (Fresno)
- A Domestic Violence Death Review Team. (Fresno)
- A Multi-Disciplinary Interview Center providing “one-stop” child abuse assessment.
(Ventura)
- A public health position of “Domestic Violence Resource Specialist”. (Fresno)
- A domestic violence screening and education component incorporated into a Maternal and Child
Health program. (Berkeley)
Finally, a number of the projects incorporated short-term activities to give participants a
tangible taste of success during the planning process. The following are examples of the small
accomplishments that often fueled enthusiasm for pursuing some of the more distant and difficult
goals:
- A resource card in languages other than English. (Long Beach)
- A teen dating video to prevent violence. (Kern, Fresno)
- A website to disseminate the strategic plan. (Marin)
- A health department family violence protocol. (Butte)
- A public service announcement for a high risk ethnic community. (Long Beach)
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The Future of Family
Violence Strategic Planning
Currently, EPIC is seeking funds to extend the planning process to additional health
departments. However, EPIC’s Violence Prevention Unit staff are also investigating other
avenues to continue to build local capacity in violence prevention. For example, plans are
underway for a statewide violence prevention network of local health departments that would include
resource exchange, technical assistance and training opportunities.
In the Words of the Grantees
From Glenn County: "The most significant outcome and product of the Family Violence
Strategic Planning Project was the development of a relatively permanent community organization
for the development of needs assessments. This group has brought together individuals and
organizations from diverse communities and socio-economic cultures, to bring ideas and data
together for sharing and building a focused response to community exigency. There exist within the
community many great opportunities and sufficient data to make meaningful changes and exact
findings to make these changes a reality."
From Contra Costa County: "The work of the violence prevention committee…acted to
energize and create linkages between many of the agencies and individuals working on this issue in
the county. Different perspectives, as well as information was shared. Smaller community
groups became "known" to larger non-profits and included in their program planning and
implementation."
From Santa Barbara County: "The Public Health Department has embraced the concept
that family violence is a public health issue, has identified a place for addressing the problem
in the Department's overall Strategic Plan, and has positioned itself among other County
departments and its collaborative partners in the community as a leader in prevention…Professionals
who have primarily focused on the intervention needs of our communities, and how to improve our
coordinated response to family violence that is already occurring, are now becoming familiar with
the distinct and different work of prevention. They now are beginning to realize the importance of
preventing the conditions, events, situations or risk factors that result in the initiation of
family violence, and also the importance of promoting protective factors in the first place."
From Solano County: "Our project has enhanced community dialogue about the lack of
coordination of family violence prevention activities in Solano County…Through our attempts to
engage the community in our strategic planning process, the issue is being kept 'front and
center.' Our assertion that health education principles should be used for planning and evaluation
has continued to benefit the community after our project was completed.
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Summary
While there is often funding to conduct specific interventions, rarely do health departments and
communities have the opportunity to engage in up front planning and development to address complex
issues such as family violence. EPIC’s VIP and FVPSP projects have demonstrated that
communities not only welcome this opportunity, but they are often transformed by it—each of the
major community systems drawn into this process are able to enhance their own capacity in violence
prevention.2
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References
- Maciak, BJ, Guzman, R, Santiago, A, Villalobos, G, and Israel, B.Establishing LA VIDA: a
community-based partnership to prevent intimate violence against Latina women.Health Education
and Behavior 1999; 26 (6): 821-840.
- Wolff T.The future of community coalition building.Am J Community Psychology 2001; 29 (2):
263-8.
Additional References
Veazie, MA, Teufel-Shone, NI, Siverman, GS, Connolly, AM, Warne, S, King, BF, Lebowitz, MD,
Meister, JS. Building community capacity in public health: the role of action-oriented
partnerships. J Public Health Management. 2001; 7 (2): 21-32.
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Polly C. Paulson, M.P.H., M.A., The California Wellness Foundation’s Violence Prevention
Initiative Fellow with EPIC, took the lead in preparing this EPICgram.
If you have any comments or questions regarding this EPICgram, please contact Stacy Alamo Mixson,
M.P.H., Violence Prevention Unit, EPIC Branch at (916) 552-9852, or email salamo@dhs.ca.gov.
If you have questions or comments regarding Family Violence Strategic Planning, please contact
Deborah Cohen at (916) 552-9853, or email dcohen@dhs.ca.gov
This publication is also available online at http://www.dhs.ca.gov/epic.
The California Department of Health Services, Epidemiology and Prevention for Injury Control
(EPIC) Branch publishes EPICgrams to inform the public about injury patterns, prevention programs,
and opportunities to protect the lives and health of all Californians.
Arnold Schwarzenegger, Governor, State of California
S. Kimberly Belshé, Secretary, Health and Human Services Agency
Sandra Shewry, Director, Department of Health Services
Alexander Kelter, M.D., Chief, EPIC Branch
Roger B. Trent, Ph.D., Chief, Injury Surveillance and Epidemiology Section
Barbara Alberson, M.P.H., Chief, State and Local Injury Control Section
Stacy Alamo Mixson, M.P.H., Chief, Violence Prevention Unit
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