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Stan GilmourVisiting Policy Fellow, Institute for Policy Research

University of Bath

A public health approach to crime and harm prevention

Profile: 21st Century Public Servant• Commander for Reading Local Policing Area, and:

• Chair of Community Safety Partnership

• Chair of Troubled Families Management Board

• Chair of Youth Justice Partnership Board

• Member of Health and Wellbeing Board

• Chair of ‘Joining the Dots’ Cross-Sector Programme

• Lead for Adverse Childhood Experiences

• Lead for Problem Solving and Early Intervention

• Lead for Integrated Data Programme

• Member of Neighbourhood Policing Guidelines Committee

• Member of Police and Public Health Consensus Working Group

• Member of the Public Health England Child Crime Group

• Member of the Criminal Justice and Acquired Brain Injury Group

• Member – Global Law Enforcement and Public Health Association

Violence as a disease - milestones.• Vincent Fellitti

• Robert Anda “Adverse Childhood Experiences”

• Gary Slutkin “Cure Violence”

• Victor Garcia

• David Kennedy. “Focused Deterrence”

• Bruce Perry

• Nadine Burke-Harris “Toxic Trauma”

• John Carnochan

• Karyn McCluskey “Violence Reduction Unit”

Scottish Violence Reduction Unit

Adverse Childhood Experiences (ACEs)

The Welsh ACEs Study (Public Health Wales NHS Trust, 2015) reported that compared with people with no ACEs, those with 4+ ACEs were:

X14 times more likely to be a victim of

violence in the last 12 months.

X15 times more likely to have been a

perpetrator of violence within the last 12 months.

X20 times more likely to be incarcerated.

Take a Public Health Approach

Deliver a systemwide partnership

Police & Public Health Consensus

• By working together and intervening early to address the common factors that bring people into contact with the police and criminal justice system and lead to poor health we can improve public safety, prevent offending and reoffending, reduce crime and help to improve outcomes for individuals and the wider community.

Neighbourhood Policing Guidelinesand Supporting Materials

http://www.college.police.uk/What-we-do/Support/Guidelines/Neighbourhood-

Policing/Pages/default.aspx

Delivering Neighbourhood Policing

Develop the evidence base.

Delivering Problem Solving

Organisational Scanning

Leadership

Organisational Capacity

Organisational Capability

Organisational Scanning

Tasking

ProblemOwnership

Breadth of Response

Partner Involvement

Measurement

Monitoring

Management

Accountability

Build the team…

Capable around

complex investigations and fast time

remands

Operationally capable when dealing with

gangs

Understand, analyse and

interpret intelligence

Effective meetings with key

stakeholders

Sound decisions in

high pressure

situations

Build and sustain long

term relationships with partners

Flexible approach

depending on children’s

needs

Innovative problem

solvers who follow

through

Be open to new ideas

and try new things

Highly motivated

and self sufficient

See the bigger

picture and work

towards joint goals

Getting from here to there

Engagement

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