MacMillan Harriet L, Wathen C Nadine, Jamieson Ellen, Boyle Michael, McNutt Louise-Anne, Worster Andrew, Lent Barbara, Webb Michelle
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioural Neurosciences, Department of Pediatrics, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada.
JAMA. 2006 Aug 2;296(5):530-6. doi: 10.1001/jama.296.5.530.
Screening for intimate partner violence (IPV) in health care settings has been recommended by some professional organizations, although there is limited information regarding the accuracy, acceptability, and completeness of different screening methods and instruments.
To determine the optimal method for IPV screening in health care settings.
Cluster randomized trial conducted from May 2004 to January 2005 at 2 each of emergency departments, family practices, and women's health clinics in Ontario, Canada.
English-speaking women aged 18 to 64 years who were well enough to participate and could be seen individually were eligible. Of 2602 eligible women, 141 (5%) refused participation.
Participants were randomized by clinic day or shift to 1 of 3 screening approaches: a face-to-face interview with a health care provider (physician or nurse), written self-completed questionnaire, and computer-based self-completed questionnaire. Two screening instruments-the Partner Violence Screen (PVS) and the Woman Abuse Screening Tool (WAST)-were administered and compared with the Composite Abuse Scale (CAS) as the criterion standard.
The approaches were evaluated on prevalence, extent of missing data, and participant preference. Agreement between the screening instruments and the CAS was examined.
The 12-month prevalence of IPV ranged from 4.1% to 17.7%, depending on screening method, instrument, and health care setting. Although no statistically significant main effects on prevalence were found for method or screening instrument, a significant interaction between method and instrument was found: prevalence was lower on the written WAST vs other combinations. The face-to-face approach was least preferred by participants. The WAST and the written format yielded significantly less missing data than the PVS and other methods. The PVS and WAST had similar sensitivities (49.2% and 47.0%, respectively) and specificities (93.7% and 95.6%, respectively).
In screening for IPV, women preferred self-completed approaches over face-to-face questioning; computer-based screening did not increase prevalence; and written screens had fewest missing data. These are important considerations for both clinical and research efforts in IPV screening.
clinicaltrials.gov Identifier: NCT00336297.
一些专业组织建议在医疗环境中筛查亲密伴侣暴力(IPV),但关于不同筛查方法和工具的准确性、可接受性及完整性的信息有限。
确定医疗环境中IPV筛查的最佳方法。
2004年5月至2005年1月在加拿大安大略省的急诊科、家庭诊所和妇女健康诊所各选取2家进行整群随机试验。
年龄在18至64岁、身体状况良好且能够单独就诊的会说英语的女性符合条件。2602名符合条件的女性中,141名(5%)拒绝参与。
参与者按诊所日或班次随机分为3种筛查方法中的一种:与医疗服务提供者(医生或护士)进行面对面访谈、书面自我完成问卷、基于计算机的自我完成问卷。使用两种筛查工具——伴侣暴力筛查量表(PVS)和妇女虐待筛查工具(WAST),并与作为标准对照的综合虐待量表(CAS)进行比较。
对筛查方法在患病率、数据缺失程度和参与者偏好方面进行评估。检验筛查工具与CAS之间的一致性。
根据筛查方法、工具和医疗环境的不同,IPV的12个月患病率在4.1%至17.7%之间。虽然未发现筛查方法或工具对患病率有统计学上的显著主效应,但发现方法与工具之间存在显著交互作用:书面WAST的患病率低于其他组合。参与者最不喜欢面对面的方法。WAST和书面形式产生的数据缺失明显少于PVS和其他方法。PVS和WAST的敏感性相似(分别为49.2%和47.0%),特异性也相似(分别为93.7%和95.6%)。
在筛查IPV时,女性更喜欢自我完成的方法而非面对面询问;基于计算机的筛查并未提高患病率;书面筛查的数据缺失最少。这些对于IPV筛查的临床和研究工作都是重要的考虑因素。
clinicaltrials.gov标识符:NCT00336297。