McCloskey Laura A, Williams Corrine M, Lichter Erika, Gerber Megan, Ganz Michael L, Sege Robert
Merrill Palmer Skillman Institute, Wayne State University, 71 East Ferry Street, Detroit, MI 48202, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2007 Aug;22(8):1067-72. doi: 10.1007/s11606-007-0199-z. Epub 2007 May 25.
Some providers observe that partners interfere with health care visits or treatment. There are no systematic investigations of the prevalence of or circumstances surrounding partner interference with health care and intimate partner violence (IPV).
To determine whether abused women report partner interference with their health care and to describe the co-occurring risk factors and health impact of such interference.
A written survey of women attending health care clinics across 5 different medical departments (e.g., emergency, primary care, obstetrics-gynecology, pediatrics, addiction recovery) housed in 8 hospital and clinic sites in Metropolitan Boston.
Women outpatients (N = 2,027) ranging in age, 59% White, 38% married, 22.6% born outside the U.S.
Questions from the Severity of Violence and Abuse Assessment Scale, the SF-36, and questions about demographics.
One in 20 women outpatients (4.6%) reported that their partners prevented them from seeking or interfered with health care. Among women with past-year physical abuse (n = 276), 17% reported that a partner interfered with their health care in contrast to 2% of women without abuse (adjusted odds ratios [OR] = 7.5). Further adjusted risk markers for partner interference included having less than a high school education (OR = 3.2), being born outside the U.S. (OR = 2.0), and visiting the clinic with a man attending (OR = 1.9). Partner interference raised the odds of women having poor health (OR = 1.8).
Partner interference with health care is a significant problem for women who are in abusive relationships and poses an obstacle to health care. Health care providers should be alert to signs of patient noncompliance or missed appointments as stemming from abusive partner control tactics.
一些医疗服务提供者发现伴侣会干扰医疗就诊或治疗。目前尚无关于伴侣干扰医疗保健及亲密伴侣暴力(IPV)的发生率或相关情况的系统性调查。
确定受虐妇女是否报告伴侣干扰其医疗保健,并描述此类干扰同时存在的风险因素及对健康的影响。
对在波士顿都会区8个医院和诊所站点的5个不同医疗科室(如急诊科、初级保健科、妇产科、儿科、成瘾康复科)就诊的女性进行书面调查。
女性门诊患者(N = 2027),年龄各异,59%为白人,38%已婚,22.6%出生在美国境外。
采用暴力和虐待严重程度评估量表、SF - 36中的问题以及关于人口统计学的问题。
每20名女性门诊患者中有1名(4.6%)报告其伴侣阻止她们寻求医疗保健或干扰了她们的治疗。在过去一年遭受身体虐待的女性(n = 276)中,17%报告伴侣干扰了她们的医疗保健,而未受虐待的女性中这一比例为2%(调整后的优势比[OR] = 7.5)。伴侣干扰的进一步调整风险指标包括未接受高中教育(OR = 3.2)、出生在美国境外(OR = 2.0)以及就诊时有男性陪同(OR = 1.9)。伴侣干扰增加了女性健康状况不佳的几率(OR = 1.8)。
伴侣干扰医疗保健对处于虐待关系中的女性来说是一个重大问题,并且对医疗保健构成障碍。医疗服务提供者应警惕患者不依从或错过预约是由虐待伴侣的控制策略所致的迹象。