Gutmanis Iris, Beynon Charlene, Tutty Leslie, Wathen C Nadine, MacMillan Harriet L
Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Schulich School of Medicine & Dentistry, The University of Western Ontario, London, Canada.
BMC Public Health. 2007 Jan 24;7:12. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-7-12.
Intimate partner violence against women (IPV) has been identified as a serious public health problem. Although the health care system is an important site for identification and intervention, there have been challenges in determining how health care professionals can best address this issue in practice. We surveyed nurses and physicians in 2004 regarding their attitudes and behaviours with respect to IPV, including whether they routinely inquire about IPV, as well as potentially relevant barriers, facilitators, experiential, and practice-related factors.
A modified Dillman Tailored Design approach was used to survey 1000 nurses and 1000 physicians by mail in Ontario, Canada. Respondents were randomly selected from professional directories and represented practice areas pre-identified from the literature as those most likely to care for women at the point of initial IPV disclosure: family practice, obstetrics and gynecology, emergency care, maternal/newborn care, and public health. The survey instrument had a case-based scenario followed by 43 questions asking about behaviours and resources specific to woman abuse.
In total, 931 questionnaires were returned; 597 by nurses (59.7% response rate) and 328 by physicians (32.8% response rate). Overall, 32% of nurses and 42% of physicians reported routinely initiating the topic of IPV in practice. Principal components analysis identified eight constructs related to whether routine inquiry was conducted: preparedness, self-confidence, professional supports, abuse inquiry, practitioner consequences of asking, comfort following disclosure, practitioner lack of control, and practice pressures. Each construct was analyzed according to a number of related issues, including clinician training and experience with woman abuse, area of practice, and type of health care provider. Preparedness emerged as a key construct related to whether respondents routinely initiated the topic of IPV.
The present study provides new insight into the factors that facilitate and impede clinicians' decisions to address the issue of IPV with their female patients. Inadequate preparation, both educational and experiential, emerged as a key barrier to routine inquiry, as did the importance of the "real world" pressures associated with the daily context of primary care practice.
针对女性的亲密伴侣暴力(IPV)已被认定为一个严重的公共卫生问题。尽管医疗保健系统是识别和干预该问题的重要场所,但在确定医疗保健专业人员如何在实践中最佳地应对这一问题方面仍存在挑战。我们在2004年对护士和医生进行了调查,了解他们对IPV的态度和行为,包括他们是否经常询问IPV情况,以及潜在的相关障碍、促进因素、经验和与实践相关的因素。
采用改良的迪尔曼定制设计方法,通过邮件对加拿大安大略省的1000名护士和1000名医生进行调查。受访者从专业名录中随机选取,代表了文献中预先确定的在女性首次披露IPV时最有可能照顾她们的实践领域:家庭医疗、妇产科、急诊护理、母婴护理和公共卫生。调查问卷采用基于案例的情景,随后是43个关于针对妇女虐待行为和资源的问题。
共收回931份问卷;护士597份(回复率59.7%),医生328份(回复率32.8%)。总体而言,32%的护士和42%的医生报告在实践中经常主动提及IPV话题。主成分分析确定了与是否进行常规询问相关的八个结构:准备情况、自信程度、专业支持、虐待询问、询问对从业者的影响、披露后的舒适度、从业者缺乏控制权以及实践压力。根据一些相关问题对每个结构进行了分析,包括临床医生对妇女虐待的培训和经验、实践领域以及医疗保健提供者类型。准备情况成为与受访者是否经常主动提及IPV话题相关的关键结构。
本研究为促进和阻碍临床医生决定与女性患者讨论IPV问题的因素提供了新的见解。教育和经验方面准备不足成为常规询问的关键障碍,与初级保健实践日常环境相关的“现实世界”压力的重要性也是如此。