Mason Robin, O'Rinn Susan E
Women's College Hospital, Women's College Research Institute, Toronto, Ontario, Canada; Dalla Lana School of Public Health and Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada;
Women's College Hospital, Women's College Research Institute, Toronto, Ontario, Canada.
Glob Health Action. 2014 Nov 20;7:24815. doi: 10.3402/gha.v7.24815. eCollection 2014.
Intimate partner violence (IPV) is a pervasive, serious problem detrimental to the health of untold numbers of women. In addition to physical injuries that may be sustained, IPV has been significantly associated with mental health challenges including substance use problems. The problems are complex, highly correlated with each other, and bidirectional in nature. Although as many as 50% of women in mental health and between 25% and 50% of women in substance abuse treatment programs report IPV, frontline workers in all three sectors state they lack the training to address these co-occurring problems.
To determine what frontline IPV, mental health, and substance use workers need to know in order to provide appropriate care to women experiencing co-occurring IPV, mental health and/or substance use problems.
Using Scholars Portal OVID, Medline and OVID PsycINFO and combinations of significant terms, we conducted a scoping review of articles published between 2005 and 2014.
An initial 4017 records were retrieved (3484 from Scholars Portal, 272 from Medline, 261 from PsycINFO). After applying inclusion and exclusion criteria, 35 articles were reviewed. Of these, 14 examined the relationships among IPV, mental health, and substance use; 7 focused on IPV and mental health; 14 looked at IPV and substance use.
Although education and training frequently figured among the recommendations in the reviewed articles, specific content for proposed education or training was lacking. The most frequently occurring recommendations focused on the need to develop better collaboration, coordination, and integration across IPV, mental health and addiction treatment services.
亲密伴侣暴力(IPV)是一个普遍存在的严重问题,对无数女性的健康有害。除了可能遭受的身体伤害外,亲密伴侣暴力还与包括物质使用问题在内的心理健康挑战密切相关。这些问题很复杂,相互之间高度关联,而且本质上是双向的。尽管在心理健康领域有多达50%的女性以及在物质滥用治疗项目中有25%至50%的女性报告遭受过亲密伴侣暴力,但这三个领域的一线工作人员都表示他们缺乏应对这些并发问题的培训。
确定亲密伴侣暴力、心理健康和物质使用方面的一线工作人员需要了解什么,以便为同时存在亲密伴侣暴力、心理健康和/或物质使用问题的女性提供适当的护理。
我们使用学者门户OVID、Medline和OVID PsycINFO以及重要术语的组合,对2005年至2014年发表的文章进行了范围综述。
最初检索到4017条记录(3484条来自学者门户,272条来自Medline,261条来自PsycINFO)。在应用纳入和排除标准后,对35篇文章进行了综述。其中,14篇研究了亲密伴侣暴力、心理健康和物质使用之间的关系;7篇关注亲密伴侣暴力和心理健康;14篇研究亲密伴侣暴力和物质使用。
尽管在所综述的文章中,教育和培训经常出现在建议之中,但缺乏关于拟议教育或培训的具体内容。最常出现的建议集中在需要在亲密伴侣暴力、心理健康和成瘾治疗服务之间建立更好的合作、协调和整合。