Health practitioners need help to offer support for domestic violence victims

Publicly released:
Australia; VIC
Photo by Melanie Wasser on Unsplash
Photo by Melanie Wasser on Unsplash

Health practitioners such as GPs and emergency care workers are often ideally placed to offer help to victims of gender-based violence, but they need more support and training to do so effectively, according to Australian researchers. In a narrative review, the researchers discuss the barriers preventing women from disclosing their domestic violence experiences and preventing health practitioners from asking the question. The researchers say appropriate training could help reduce these barriers so the health systems people are most likely to access have the capacity to identify those in need. They say a major focus of training should be on providing culturally safe assistance to Indigenous women, who experience domestic violence at much higher rates.

Media release

From: Medical Journal of Australia

GENDER-BASED VIOLENCE: HEALTH SYSTEMS NEED RESOURCING TO SUPPORT AND RESPOND

HEALTH systems play a key role in addressing gender-based violence, particularly domestic and sexual violence, but have not been given adequate resources to respond in a way that benefits victims/survivors and children, according to the authors of a Narrative Review published today by the Medical Journal of Australia.

“Gender-based violence includes physical, psychological, sexual or economic behaviour causing harm for

reasons associated with people’s gender,” wrote the authors, led by Professor Kelsey Hegarty, Chair of Family Violence Prevention at the University of Melbourne’s Safer Families Centre and Royal Women’s Hospital.

“A violation of human rights, women are disproportionately affected by gender-based violence, with Indigenous women and girls facing particularly high risk.”

Australian numbers show that one in 6 women and one in 17 men have experienced domestic violence, with sexual violence occurring against one in 6 women and one in 25 men. Australian Indigenous women’s experiences are 35-80 times the national average, wrote Hegarty and colleagues.

“Victims/survivors are more likely to access health services (eg, general practice, sexual health, mental health, emergency care, Aboriginal community-controlled health services and maternity services) than any other professional help,” they wrote. “Health practitioners are ideally placed to identify domestic and sexual violence, provide a first line response, and refer on to support services.

“However, domestic and sexual violence continue to be under-recognised and poorly addressed by health practitioners. It is essential for practitioners to have the skills to ask and respond to domestic and sexual violence, given that victims/survivors who receive positive reactions are more likely to accept help.”

Personal barriers to health practitioners bringing up gender-based violence with their patients include “feeling they ‘can’t interfere’ as domestic and sexual violence are private issues, ‘don’t have control’ over outcomes for victims/survivors, and ‘won’t take responsibility’ as it is someone else’s role”.

“At the structural level, practitioners perceive that ‘the environment works against us’ with lack of time and spaces, they are ‘trying to tackle the problem on their own’ without a team behind them, and ‘societal beliefs enable us to blame the victim’.

“System-level barriers, such as the presence of the partner in consultations or a lack of training or referral services, can impede practitioners even further,” wrote Hegarty and colleagues.

There are barriers to disclosure for patients as well, including fears about consequences of disclosing (eg, children being removed), judgemental responses, confidentiality being broken, not trusting practitioners, limited time, negative responses, perception that practitioners were not competent, shame, unawareness that what they were experiencing was abuse, or being socially entrapped.

“For too long,” Hegarty and colleagues wrote, “this social condition has been seen as the domain of social services or justice, with policy failing to resource an integrated response by the health system.

“The unfortunate consequences of this lack of recognition and resourcing of health settings is that many victims/survivors, children exposed to domestic violence, and people who use domestic or sexual violence have remained unidentified or inadequately supported.

“Health practitioners are in an ideal position to recognise gender-based violence, ask through sensitive inquiry, assess risk, provide a first line response, and contribute to ongoing responses to enable pathways to safety, health and wellbeing.

“System support through committed leadership, specific policies and protocols tailored to context, clinical champions, infrastructure, and quality improvement activities is essential.

“We still have a long way to go before these evidence-based recommendations, comprehensively outlined in the Royal Australian College of General Practitioners’ White Book, are implemented in practice,” Hegarty and colleagues concluded.

All MJA media releases are open access and can be found at: https://www.mja.com.au/journal/media

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Medical Journal of Australia
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Organisation/s: The University of Melbourne
Funder: The Safer Families Centre is funded by the National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) grant No. 1116690. The NHMRC did not have any role in the planning, writing or publication of the work.
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