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Tell Primary Care Physician of
Domestic Violence
By Rick Nauert, Ph.D.
Psych Central
- New research finds that individuals who initially disclose
intimate partner violence (IPV) to their primary care or ob/gyn
experience the best outcomes.
Researchers from Boston University
School of Medicine (BUSM) and Boston Medical Center (BMC) found that
patients who disclose intimate partner violence (IPV) to their
clinicians of any type did not experience serious harm. However,
those who disclosed IPV in a primary care or obstetrics/gynecology
setting received the most benefit.
The findings, which appear in the
Biomedical Central Public Health Journal, also conclude that
disclosures made in an emergency department setting were more
problematic from the patient’s point of view.
Investigators studied 27 IPV
survivors recruited through community support programs in
Massachusetts. The participants were given in-depth interviews to
ascertain types of medical encounters relating to abuse, with
encounters described as either single interactions or continued
contact over a period of time.
Participants described disclosure
of IPV to medical personnel. They also reported episodes in which
they were asked about or treated for an IPV related problem in which
they did not disclose.
The researchers determined the
medical specialty in which the encounters occurred, and limited
their focus to emergency department, obstetrical/gynecological care,
and primary care. The researchers also labeled whether harms
occurred as a result of any disclosure as well as the perceived
helpfulness (beneficial or not).
Of the 59 visits studied; 23 were
in a primary care setting, 17 in the emergency department and 19 in
obstetrics/gynecology. Participants reported disclosure IPV to a
clinician in more than half of the encounters, and actively did not
disclose in 30 percent, while sensing the clinician’s knowledge
without their own disclosure in 10 percent.
No situations of any type resulted
in serious harms. The vast majority of disclosures were deemed
beneficial, whereas only a third of the non-disclosure were
considered beneficial. However, in the emergency department setting,
only one quarter of the disclosures were considered beneficial,
compared to three quarters in obstetrics/gynecology and 100 percent
in a primary care setting.
According to the research,
consequences from unhelpful disclosures resulted in fear and
avoidance of health care.
“The most serious negative
consequences of disclosure occurred when participants reported
feeling endangered because of disclosure after treatment for acute
injuries in the emergency department,” said lead author Jane
Liebschutz, MD, MPH, FACP.
Liebschutz added. “Participants
felt that ineffective communication on safety assessment referrals
and follow-up for IPV, as well as the lack of emotional connection
with clinicians, were key factors in determining unhelpful
disclosures.”
Many participants who had a
beneficial disclosure experienced a change in their circumstances
such as, leaving an abusive spouse, entering a detoxification
program or filing a police report. These changes occurred after a
clinician worked with an individual over a period of time.
Instead of immediate end to the
abuse, these patient-clinician encounters resulted in a shift in the
participant’s self-esteem, perception of the violent relationship,
or awareness of alternatives, eventually empowering the victim to
seek help for the abuse independently.
“Treatment for acute injury
relating to IPV should be viewed by clinicians as an opportunity to
educate and empower patients, and providing options for the patient
when they are ready,” said Liebschutz. “Clinicians may be empowered
if they feel they have a task in helping the patient, rather than
just uncovering a painful problem.” --
PsychCentral.com
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