Using Data in Unconventional Ways: What ICADV Is Learning from Disabled Hoosiers Through Art

Expanding How We Understand Domestic and Sexual Violence
At ICADV, we are continually exploring new and meaningful ways to understand the experiences of survivors across Indiana. One area where traditional data collection consistently falls short is in capturing the realities of Disabled people and people with disabilities who experience domestic and sexual violence.

Many existing data sources do not collect disability status at all or rely solely on the six standard disability questions used in federal surveys. Even when disability is measured, reporting systems and data collection tools are frequently inaccessible. Physical, cognitive, and other barriers can prevent people with disabilities from safely reporting harm or participating in research. As a result, disabled survivors are often underrepresented—or entirely missing—from the data that informs policies, programs, and prevention strategies.

With more than one in four Hoosiers identifying as disabled, these data gaps have serious consequences. When disabled people are left out, our understanding of violence is incomplete, and our prevention efforts fail to reach those who may be at greatest risk.

Moving Beyond Counting Harm
Collecting, analyzing, and publishing data about violence against disabled people is essential. However, data must do more than count incidents after harm occurs. We must also understand what keeps people safe, what promotes healing, and what helps disabled people thrive within their communities.

This includes examining how we create protective, affirming, and accessible environments that support autonomy, dignity, and resilience. To do this effectively, we need data collection methods that are as inclusive, flexible, and creative as the communities we aim to serve.

Art as Data: Centering Disabled Voices
With support from the Noyes Foundation, the Hub exhibits expressive arts projects that invites disabled people to share their experiences, identities, barriers, and sources of strength through creative expression. This approach allowed participants to communicate on their own terms, using methods that felt safer and more accessible than traditional surveys or reporting tools.

The artwork produced through this project is not only beautiful, it is data. It is storytelling. It is lived experience. It offers insights that traditional research methods are rarely designed to capture. By treating art as valid and meaningful data, we are able to learn directly from disabled people in ways that honor their expertise in their own lives.

As we reviewed the artwork and accompanying reflections, clear themes emerged that deepen our understanding of both risk factors and protective factors related to domestic and sexual violence within disabled communities.

Protective Factors That Support Well‑Being
Many participants emphasized the importance of supportive relationships and environments. Words such as love, joy, calm, family, encouragement, acceptance, and stable housing appeared repeatedly throughout the artwork. These concepts highlight how affirming relationships, safe housing, and access to people who can help connect individuals to resources play a critical role in safety and healing.

Stable housing was consistently identified as foundational to well‑being. A safe place to live is not just a basic need, it is a key factor in reducing vulnerability to violence.
Identity and empowerment also emerged as strong protective themes. Participants reflected on disability identity, queer identity, visibility, and dignity as sources of strength. They shared that being able to define oneself and be recognized as a full, autonomous person is closely linked to self‑worth, confidence, and meaningful connection.

Creativity itself played a protective role. Engagement with special interests, passion projects, and artistic expression supported mental health, joy, and agency. Creative work offered participants a way to process experiences, express identity, and cultivate a sense of purpose.

Risk Factors That Increase Vulnerability
Alongside protective elements, participants also shared experiences associated with increased risk and harm. This included references to mental health challenges such as depression, anxiety, chronic stress, sadness, and suicidal ideation. These themes underscore the need for mental health supports that are affordable, accessible, and affirming for disabled people.

Trauma, abuse, and oppression were recurring themes throughout the artwork. Participants named experiences of violence, discrimination, stereotyping, internalized ableism, and isolation. These harms are not individual failures; they are the result of systemic inequities and social exclusion.

Barriers to autonomy were also commonly described. Participants shared experiences of having decision‑making power taken away, being treated as a burden, or feeling constrained by systems that limit independence. These conditions can increase vulnerability to abuse and negatively impact mental health.

Social isolation appeared repeatedly as both a risk factor for violence and a consequence of ableism—particularly when disabled people are excluded from community spaces and relationships.

Participants also pointed to unmet needs, including exhaustion, emotional distress, and concerns about safety. These reflections signal gaps in support systems and highlight areas where intervention is urgently needed.

What This Means for Prevention and Public Health
Together, these insights point to several critical considerations for public health and violence prevention efforts. Participants’ reflections reinforce the importance of intersectionality, particularly for people who are disabled, queer, neurodivergent, or navigating multiple marginalized identities. Prevention strategies must recognize these overlapping experiences and address compounded forms of stigma.

The data also highlights the value of safe and nurturing environments, including stable housing, supportive relationships, and spaces that encourage creativity and independence. Supporting autonomy and decision‑making is essential for promoting safety and well‑being.

Finally, the prevalence of trauma and mental health concerns reinforces the need for accessible, trauma‑informed, and disability‑affirming services across systems.

Expanding What Counts as Data
This project demonstrates that disabled Hoosiers are fully capable of sharing their experiences. The challenge has never been communication—it has been whether our systems are prepared to listen.

When we expand our definition of data to include art, creativity, and expressive storytelling, we gain deeper and more accurate insights. We center people who have historically been excluded, strengthen our understanding of both risk and protection, and inform prevention strategies grounded in real lived experiences.

As you explore the art on the IDJ Resource Hub, we invite you to appreciate the talent on display, reflect on the messages the artwork conveys, and commit to being inclusive and creative when collecting valuable information from communities with distinct needs and powerful solutions.

ICADV will continue to use innovative and inclusive data methods to build safer, more ccessible, and more responsive systems for all survivors.

This content was written by Timike Jones at tjones@icadvinc.org.

To learn more about how we evaluate or do violence prevention, please email barizmendi@icadvinc.org.

I Am Whole By Arturo Contreras Mejia

There is a radial gradient with a golden center that fades into purple with text. The text reads I am whole (bold lettering). I am whole (bolder lettering). I am not deficient (light lettering). I am enough (bold lettering). I am enough for my (bold lettering) community. I am right to trust me (bold lettering). I could only lead me to where I want to go. I am whole (boldest lettering). I am efficient (boldest lettering). I am plentiful (boldest lettering).

Image Description: Arturo is standing on the left of the picture, in front of a telephone pole with his arms crossed. He is wearing a pink hoodie, jeans, and sunglasses. He has a serious bearded face. To the right, is a plentiful cactus plant. Behind a gas station that reads “kinda tropical”.

Arturo’s Story

Being diagnosed with ADHD as an adult is weird. Suddenly so much of your life makes sense, like now I know why I always forget something at home when I’m about to leave. But the other thought that would enter my brain is that I was not enough. I would think this because I would fall short. I always over promise but underdeliver. There was always this nagging voice at the back of my head telling me that what I was doing was wrong, that I was not giving enough, that of course life is going terribly because I thought I knew what was best.

All of those things were untrue. I knew then and I know now that its not true.

To combat this I would face them head on. I tell myself that I am enough, that I am right and that I know where I want to go in life. ADHD is not a hinderence. It is not an unbeatable monster. ADHD is a friend that tells you EVERYTHING. ADHD tells you; what you are stressed about, because you (I) avoid it and get anxious about it; where you can find happiness, because you will be obsessed with it; what you don’t like, it calls attention to the things you like (day dreaming). 

I have ADHD. But it is not who I am. I am whole. I am a person. A person who is enough. A person who adds value. A person who loves ,cries, and thinks. ADHD is a part of me, a part that I have struggled to come to terms with. But, the ADHD is not going to go away and neither am I. 

My ADHD makes me feel empowered. I have the power to think about many things at once, to see details that others skip over, connect with lots of people because of my never ending thirst for knowledge and the dopamine that comes with learning. But aside from my own actions it is my community that supports and empowers me. Like IDJ empowers me to share my experience, allowing me to fill a me-shaped hole in my community. Spaces that allow creatives to work, are empowering because it tell me that someone wants to hear our story, see our point of view. 

What does not make me feel supported are the suspiciously low number of callbacks I receive when I self identify as having a disability. What does not make me feel empowered is the stripping of our Universities majors to “better reflect the job market”. The market does not make me feel supported, because there was a time when mental asylums where the solution the market dictated. 

Investing in people and programs to let people express themselves , no matter how difficult the truth, will always be more supporting than pretending that people with disabilities don’t exist. The difficult truth is that everyone in their life will at some point experience disability. We need to support and empower those of us who are disabled now, so that when we are disabled we can work together and find out. What that looks like is investing in these communities, investing in their voices, and making sure to keep those voices at the decision making tables.

About the Author

Arturo is standing on the left of the picture, in front of a telephone pole with his arms crossed. He is wearing a pink hoodie, jeans, and sunglasses. He has a serious bearded face. To the right, is a plentiful cactus plant. Behind a gas station that reads “kinda tropical”.

Image Description: Arturo is standing on the left of the picture, in front of a telephone pole with his arms crossed. He is wearing a pink hoodie, jeans, and sunglasses. He has a serious bearded face. To the right, is a plentiful cactus plant. Behind a gas station that reads “kinda tropical”.

Arturo Contreras Mejia is a 27-year-old Mexican Man. He is currently a student at IUPUI studying digital marketing. Arturo is an Indianapolis creative. In his free time, Arturo enjoys spending time with his loved ones.

Safety By Mateo Alvarez

This painting features a vibrant, diagonal rainbow background. Scattered across the rainbow are several golden infinity symbols, a white skull with a pink bow, a penguin, and a figure with blue hair. Other icons include headphones with musical notes, a medicine bottle with pills, a syringe, and a black pendant.

Image Description: This painting features a vibrant, diagonal rainbow background. Scattered across the rainbow are several golden infinity symbols, a white skull with a pink bow, a penguin, and a figure with blue hair. Other icons include headphones with musical notes, a medicine bottle with pills, a syringe, and a black pendant.

Mateo’s  art represents the good and safe things that help them feel better, less alone in the world. For example, the monster high character they painted is their favorite representation of autism.

The Images of Depression By Ellie Satre

The pencil sketch depicts a bloodied hand holding a mirror shard reflecting the skull of the beholder.

Image Description: The pencil sketch depicts a bloodied hand holding a mirror shard reflecting the skull of the beholder. In my mind, this is what depression looks like. It is something that on the outside you only look hurt – maybe a little bloodied. However, when you look upon yourself, you feel nothing, a void that feels so close to death. My sketch depicts the morbidness and the pain that clinical depression can cause in a person and that it can be anyone.

Just see me

Just See Me
By Ellie Satre

Sometimes I wish I could just die.


It seems so easy…

…the flick of a switch…
…the push of a button…


If only it were as easy as closing your eyes

wishing it to be.

I don’t really understand it—
practically never, if I’m being truthful.


The voices.
So many voices,
myself but not at all.


The weight,
a monster

pulling

down

my spirit.

Not a comforting weight
like a dog on your lap,


but a deadly weight


that drags,

slowing you down,

whispering

you’re not good enough,

you’d be better off dead.

SHUT UP!

That’s what I tell it,
but it doesn’t listen.


“You’re fine. Just sleep it off.”


That’s what others say,
but they don’t understand.


“I’ve been sad before. What’s the difference?”


I try to explain:
I can’t catch my breath,


all these worries

An image of a concrete poem (also known as a shape poem) designed in the silhouette of a bowl.

(Image description: The outline of the vessel is formed by the phrase “Filling my body to the brim” curving along the bottom and sides. The “steam” rising from the top and the entire center of the cup are filled with the word “Worries” repeated many times in various fonts, sizes, and orientations, creating a cluttered and overwhelming visual effect.)

“If this is how you feel
I don’t know how to help you.
Just suck it up, ig.”


Little do you know
you make the tears heavier
and the weight more painful.


I can’t stop it,
but you keep making it worse.


If I don’t know how to explain it,
just be there for me.
Don’t belittle me.
Don’t think of me as less.


“Oh pobrecito.”


I don’t need your pity.
I have monsters, just like you—
they just speak louder
and weigh more.


My feelings are real.
You might not see it on the outside.
I might hide it with a mask,

but it’s cracking
more and more every day.


It’s not always bad,
but it’s still real.


Just see me for who I am.
I beg of you.

About the Author

Chinese 18 year old girl with short black hair.

Image Description: A young woman with short, dark hair and a slight smile poses outdoors. She is wearing a light blue ribbed tank top with thin black straps, a black choker necklace with a silver snake pendant, and a smartwatch. The background shows a shallow, rippling body of water with a sandy bottom.

Artist Bio: My name is Ellie Satre. I’m currently an 18 year old freshman at Indiana University Indianapolis. I’m currently studying Biology and Forensic Science so that I may go to Med School to become a forensic pathologist. While I don’t have a physical disability, I have struggled with anxiety and depression for years. I have struggled with suicidal ideologies and I used to put up with those that wouldn’t help, listen, or understand. Now, I choose to surround myself with those that are willing to listen and those who are willing to understand and help. I believe that everyone deserves respect and for their voices to be heard. Mental disabilities can be greatly overlooked and put off as something that doesn’t matter as much because it’s “all in the head.” The only thing that does it make the voices louder. Everyone deserves a voice. Everyone deserves care. With my whole heart, I believe this.