Hospital Violence Intervention Program (HVIP+) Community Model, Central Arkansas
Summary
The National Institutes of Health has registered a new clinical trial (NCT07539142) testing the preliminary efficacy of a Hospital-based Violence Intervention Program (HVIP) in Central Arkansas. The optimization randomized control trial will evaluate interventions including Brief Bedside, Peer Support, Case Management with Voucher, and SELF Group Therapy Sessions for hospital-based violence intervention, community firearm violence, and firearm behaviors.
What changed
This registry entry adds a new clinical trial (NCT07539142) to ClinicalTrials.gov. The study will use an optimization randomized control trial design to test the preliminary efficacy of a Hospital-based Violence Intervention Program in Central Arkansas. Conditions include hospital-based violence intervention, community firearm violence, and firearm behaviors.
Healthcare providers and researchers in hospital-based violence intervention programs may wish to monitor the outcomes of this study for potential implications on program design and efficacy evaluation methodologies.
Archived snapshot
Apr 21, 2026GovPing captured this document from the original source. If the source has since changed or been removed, this is the text as it existed at that time.
The HVIP+ Community Model
N/A NCT07539142 Kind: NA Apr 20, 2026
Abstract
The present study will use an optimization randomized control trial design to test the preliminary efficacy of a Hospital-based Violence Intervention Program (HVIP) in Central Arkansas.
Conditions: Hospital-based Violence Intervention, Community Firearm Violence, Firearm Behaviors
Interventions: Brief Bedside, Peer Support, Case Management + Voucher, SELF Group Therapy Sessions
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