Bair-Merritt Megan H, Crowne Sarah Shea, Burrell Lori, Caldera Debra, Cheng Tina L, Duggan Anne K
Division of General Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
Pediatrics. 2008 Mar;121(3):e473-80. doi: 10.1542/peds.2007-1671.
Intimate partner violence has been linked to poor child health. A continuous relationship with a primary care pediatric provider can help to detect intimate partner violence and connect families with needed services. The objectives of this study were to determine the relationship between intimate partner violence and (1) maternal report of a regular site for well-child care, (2) maternal report of a primary pediatric provider, (3) well-child visits in the first year of life, (4) up-to-date immunizations at 2 years of age, (5) maternal report of medical neglect, and (6) maternal report of the pediatric provider-caregiver relationship.
This retrospective cohort study evaluated data from 209 at-risk families participating in the evaluation of the Healthy Families Alaska program. Research staff interviewed mothers near the time of an index child's birth and again at the child's second birthday. Medical charts were abstracted for information on well-child visits and immunizations.
Mothers who disclosed intimate partner violence at the initial interview (n = 62) were significantly less likely to report a regular site for well-child care or a primary pediatric provider. In multivariable models, children of mothers who disclosed intimate partner violence tended to be less likely to have the recommended 5 well-child visits within the first year of life and were significantly less likely to be fully immunized at 2 years of age. Differences in medical neglect were not statistically significant. Of mothers who reported a specific primary pediatric provider, those with intimate partner violence histories trusted this provider less and tended to rate less favorably pediatric provider-caregiver communication and the overall quality of the pediatric provider-caregiver relationship.
Future research should explore effective ways to link intimate partner violence-exposed children with a medical home and a primary pediatric provider and to improve relationships between pediatric providers and caregivers who face violence at home.
亲密伴侣暴力与儿童健康状况不佳有关。与初级保健儿科医生保持持续关系有助于发现亲密伴侣暴力行为,并为家庭提供所需服务。本研究的目的是确定亲密伴侣暴力与以下因素之间的关系:(1)母亲报告的儿童健康保健常规场所;(2)母亲报告的初级儿科医生;(3)生命第一年的儿童健康检查;(4)2岁时的最新免疫接种情况;(5)母亲报告的医疗忽视情况;(6)母亲对儿科医生与照顾者关系的报告。
这项回顾性队列研究评估了参与阿拉斯加健康家庭项目评估的209个高危家庭的数据。研究人员在索引儿童出生时及儿童两岁生日时再次采访母亲。提取病历以获取儿童健康检查和免疫接种的信息。
在初次访谈时披露亲密伴侣暴力行为的母亲(n = 62)报告儿童健康保健常规场所或初级儿科医生的可能性显著降低。在多变量模型中,披露亲密伴侣暴力行为的母亲的孩子在生命第一年接受推荐的5次儿童健康检查的可能性较小,且在2岁时完全免疫接种的可能性显著降低。医疗忽视方面的差异无统计学意义。在报告了特定初级儿科医生的母亲中,有亲密伴侣暴力史的母亲对该医生的信任度较低,并且倾向于对儿科医生与照顾者之间的沟通以及儿科医生与照顾者关系的整体质量评价较低。
未来的研究应探索有效的方法,将暴露于亲密伴侣暴力行为的儿童与医疗之家和初级儿科医生联系起来,并改善儿科医生与在家中面临暴力的照顾者之间的关系。