Australian Catholic University, Melbourne, VIC, Australia.
J Clin Nurs. 2013 Aug;22(15-16):2253-63. doi: 10.1111/j.1365-2702.2012.04311.x. Epub 2012 Nov 2.
To explore healthcare experiences of Australian women living with intimate partner violence (IPV) and consider how these influence their understanding of IPV and sense of self.
Despite international campaigns condemning violence against women, IPV remains a worldwide problem and recent Australian community attitudes demonstrate ongoing beliefs condemning women in abusive relationships. Women experiencing IPV are over-represented in healthcare-seeking populations; however, they are rarely identified as experiencing abuse and are often not provided care directed towards achieving ongoing safety. While women seek empathetic healthcare, disclosure of abuse often results in being judged negatively or blamed.
A grounded theory study drawing on Clarke's (Sage Publications, London, 2005) analytic approach of situational analysis.
Semi-structured interviews conducted with seven women. Data was analysed using NVIVO 8 software within a Situational Analysis framework.
Four major categories were identified: Accessing healthcare: challenges and barriers; Care women need vs. care women receive; Discourses of IPV and constructions of self; and Acknowledging IPV: moving on and re-constructing self. Women faced significant challenges in accessing emergency healthcare and healthcare then often lacked empathy. Women created an understanding of self from a world dominated by an abusive partner and needed assistance re-labelling their experiences as IPV. Healthcare professionals who provided empathetic care were instrumental in assisting this process, enhancing women's abilities to explore options for limiting abuse and assisting them to enhance their self-efficacy and reconstruct a positive sense of self.
Healthcare is one of the few avenues women living with IPV have to receive emotional and physical support. Healthcare that ignores psychosocial issues further damages women's sense of self.
Women require timely information and empathetic support from healthcare professionals to assist them in understanding and labelling their experiences as IPV. This enhances women's ability to feel deserving of, and ideally achieve, a life without violence.
探索澳大利亚遭受亲密伴侣暴力(IPV)的女性的医疗体验,并探讨这些体验如何影响她们对 IPV 的理解和自我认知。
尽管国际社会谴责暴力侵害妇女行为,但 IPV 仍然是一个全球性问题,最近澳大利亚社区的态度表明,对处于虐待关系中的妇女的持续谴责。经历 IPV 的妇女在寻求医疗保健的人群中比例过高;然而,她们很少被认定为遭受虐待,并且往往没有得到旨在实现持续安全的护理。尽管妇女寻求富有同情心的医疗保健,但披露虐待行为往往会导致被负面评价或被指责。
一项基于 Clarke(Sage Publications,London,2005)情境分析分析方法的扎根理论研究。
对 7 名妇女进行半结构化访谈。使用 NVIVO 8 软件在情境分析框架内对数据进行分析。
确定了四个主要类别:获得医疗保健:挑战和障碍;妇女需要的护理与妇女得到的护理;IPV 的论述和自我建构;以及承认 IPV:继续前进和重建自我。妇女在获得紧急医疗保健方面面临重大挑战,而且医疗保健往往缺乏同理心。妇女从一个由虐待伴侣主导的世界中形成了对自我的理解,并需要帮助重新将自己的经历标签为 IPV。提供同理心护理的医疗保健专业人员在协助这一过程中发挥了重要作用,增强了妇女探索限制虐待的选择的能力,并帮助她们增强自我效能感并重建积极的自我意识。
医疗保健是遭受 IPV 的女性获得情感和身体支持的为数不多的途径之一。忽视心理社会问题的医疗保健会进一步损害妇女的自我意识。
妇女需要从医疗保健专业人员那里获得及时的信息和同理心支持,以帮助她们理解和将自己的经历标签为 IPV。这增强了妇女感到自己值得拥有、并理想地实现没有暴力的生活的能力。