RT Article T1 Hospital-Based Violence Intervention Programs (HVIPs): Making a Case for Qualitative Evaluation Designs JF Crime & delinquency VO 69 IS 3 SP 487 OP 509 A1 Ranjan, Sheetal A2 Neudecker, Christine H. A2 Strange, Catherine Clare A2 Wojcik, Michelle L. T. A2 Shah, Aakash A2 Solhkhah, Ramon LA English YR 2023 UL https://krimdok.uni-tuebingen.de/Record/1839615532 AB Hospital-based violence intervention programs (HVIPs) are multidisciplinary programs that use a health/public health approach to violence intervention by intervening with victims of violence at the time of injury and leveraging hospital- and community-based resources to address the underlying risk factors for violence. Much of the evidence for the impacts of HVIPs comes from qualitative research, yet there are few reviews of the efficacy of these approaches, and none that focus specifically on the HVIP context. This paper fills this gap by reviewing the common qualitative elements of published HVIP evaluations, and discusses their strengths, challenges, and relative applicability for researchers and practitioners alike. It then sets forth a research agenda, making a case for further (and more varied) qualitative HVIP evaluation research. K1 community-based healthcare K1 hospital-based violence intervention programs (HVIPs) K1 Program Evaluation K1 qualitative methodology DO 10.1177/00111287221110446