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Emory Hillandale’s Violence Prevention Program experiences growth and impact after first year
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Tarvis Thompson
Emory Hillandale Hospital

Emory Hillandale Hospital’s Violence Prevention Program (VPP) is the first program of its kind at a community hospital in the state of Georgia.

— Photo by Jack Kearse, Emory Health Sciences Center

STONECREST, GA - Emory Hillandale Hospital’s Violence Prevention Program (VPP), the first program of its kind at a community hospital in the state of Georgia, is marking an impactful first year in operation. The VPP at Emory Hillandale Hospital is made possible by the generosity of the DeKalb County government, which in 2023 awarded $11 million for improvements at Emory Hillandale Hospital, plus an additional $2 million allocated to support the VPP for two years.

“Over the last year, Emory Hillandale Hospital’s Violence Prevention Program has been intentional about listening to the concerns of our community and establishing vital connections and critical services to interrupt the cycle of violence,” says Jen Schuck, CEO of Emory Hillandale Hospital, Emory Decatur Hospital and Emory Long-Term Acute Care. “I am excited about what’s happening inside our hospital’s walls and beyond to remove stigma and end the surge of violence in our local community.”

Emory Hillandale Hospital serves the Lithonia/Stonecrest community and surrounding areas. The VPP was created in response to Emory Healthcare’s 2022 Community Health Needs Assessment that revealed gun violence was a significant concern to community residents. Although it is not a trauma center, the Emory Hillandale emergency department saw 80 patients injured due to gun violence in 2024.

The majority of those patients were transferred to Grady Memorial Hospital’s Level 1 Trauma Center. At Grady, Emory School of Medicine and Morehouse School of Medicine faculty care for trauma patients, along with Grady’s care team members. Staff from the Interrupting Violence with Youth and Young Adults (IVVY) project, a Grady-based program designed to reduce re-injury, retaliation and trauma symptoms, also support these patients.

Participants at Emory Hillandale Hospital's Peace Walk on June 8, 2024, wrote messages to the community.

“We analyze Emory Hillandale Hospital emergency department data to better serve the needs of violence victims and their families before they leave our hospital,” says Janikqua Cutno, LMSW, director of the Emory Hillandale Violence Prevention Program. “In addition to physical wounds, there are also mental and financial tolls that violence can create. Our collaborative efforts with Grady help link patient-centered care with wraparound services, including educational resources and life skills that help get to the root cause of violence and hopefully stop it before it can begin.”

In 2024, Cutno was joined by two violence intervention specialists and a community health worker to develop and implement the VPP’s strategy. Together, the team hosted the first annual Peace Walk in recognition of National Gun Violence Awareness Month and collaborated with Emory Hillandale doctors and nurses to support victims of violence.

The Emory Hillandale Hospital VPP has participated in a series of initiatives in 2025 to drive meaningful conversations and build safer, more resilient communities including:

  • Second Annual Violence Prevention Symposium on Feb. 26, presented by Emory University and Emory Healthcare, the Satcher Health Leadership Institute at Morehouse School of Medicine, 100 Black Men of Atlanta Inc., and The King Center for Nonviolent Social Change. Cutno was a featured panelist in the discussion entitled “Complementary Strategies for Preventing Gun Violence in Metro Atlanta.”
  • Prevention University’s Skill Development Group, an eight-week course for young people ages 15-24 to engage in weekly conversations, therapeutic and restorative practices, job readiness, problem-solving plus more, and learn skills that will help them better navigate and diffuse potentially violent interactions.
  • Breaking Barriers, Building Futures Community Violence Intervention (CVI) Summit hosted on Feb. 5 in collaboration with Moms Demand Action. The summit provided a platform for grassroots CVI organizations and helped deepen legislators’ understanding of the need for long-term funding and policy support to strengthen and sustain CVI initiatives across Georgia.
  • The Interprofessional Education-Achieving Collaboration Team Solutions (IPE-ACTS) Day at Emory’s Woodruff Health Sciences Center designed to equip the competencies of Emory University’s first-year medical, nursing and public health students on real-world health challenges affecting the Emory Healthcare system, such as gun violence.

Cutno goes on to explain, “It takes a village to reduce the risk of violence so that individuals can rebuild their lives and strengthen their communities, and evidence-based violence prevention programs like ours can continue to make a difference.”

To learn more about the Violence Prevention Program at Emory Hillandale Hospital, email janikqua.cutno@emoryhealthcare.org or call 404-985-9366.


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