Koziol-McLain Jane, Vandal Alain C, Nada-Raja Shyamala, Wilson Denise, Glass Nancy E, Eden Karen B, McLean Christine, Dobbs Terry, Case James
Centre for Interdisciplinary Trauma Research, Auckland University of Technology, Private Bag 92006, Auckland, 1142, New Zealand.
Faculty of Health and Environmental Sciences, Auckland University of Technology, Auckland, New Zealand and Ko Awatea, Auckland, New Zealand.
BMC Public Health. 2015 Jan 31;15:56. doi: 10.1186/s12889-015-1395-0.
Intimate partner violence (IPV) and its associated negative mental health consequences are significant for women in New Zealand and internationally. One of the most widely recommended interventions is safety planning. However, few women experiencing violence access specialist services for safety planning. A safety decision aid, weighing the dangers of leaving or staying in an abusive relationship, gives women the opportunity to prioritise, plan and take action to increase safety for themselves and their children. This randomised controlled trial is testing the effectiveness of an innovative, interactive web-based safety decision aid. The trial is an international collaborative concurrent replication of a USA trial (IRIS study NCT01312103), regionalised for the Aotearoa New Zealand culture and offers fully automated online trial recruitment, eligibility screening and consent.
METHODS/DESIGN: In a fully automated web-based trial (isafe) 340 abused women will be randomly assigned in equal numbers to a safety decision aid intervention or usual safety planning control website. Intervention components include: (a) safety priority setting, (b) danger assessment and (c) an individually tailored safety action plan. Self-reported outcome measures are collected at baseline and 3, 6, and 12-months post-baseline. Primary outcomes are depression (measured by Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale, Revised) and IPV exposure (measured by Severity Violence Against Women Scale) at 12 months post-baseline. Secondary outcomes include PTSD, psychological abuse, decisional conflict, safety behaviors and danger in the relationship.
This trial will provide much-needed information on the potential relationships among safety planning, improved mental health, reduced violence as well as decreased decisional conflict related to safety in the abusive relationship. The novel web-based safety decision aid intervention may provide a cost-effective, easily accessed safety-planning resource that can be translated into clinical and community practice by multiple health disciplines and advocates. The trial will also provide information about how women in abusive relationships safely access safety information and resources through the Internet. Finally, the trial will inform other research teams on the feasibility and acceptability of fully automated recruitment, eligibility screening, consent and retention procedures.
Trial registered on 03 July 2012 on the Australian New Zealand Clinical Trials Registry ACTRN12612000708853 .
亲密伴侣暴力(IPV)及其相关的负面心理健康后果在新西兰乃至国际上对女性都具有重要影响。最广泛推荐的干预措施之一是安全规划。然而,很少有遭受暴力的女性能够获得专门的安全规划服务。一种安全决策辅助工具,权衡离开或留在虐待关系中的危险,使女性有机会确定优先事项、制定计划并采取行动,以提高自身及子女的安全。这项随机对照试验正在测试一种创新的、基于网络的交互式安全决策辅助工具的有效性。该试验是对美国一项试验(IRIS研究,NCT01312103)的国际合作同步复制,并针对新西兰文化进行了区域化调整,提供全自动的在线试验招募、资格筛选和同意程序。
方法/设计:在一项基于网络的全自动试验(isafe)中,340名受虐待女性将被等数量随机分配到安全决策辅助干预组或常规安全规划对照组网站。干预内容包括:(a)安全优先级设定,(b)危险评估,以及(c)个性化的安全行动计划。在基线以及基线后3个月、6个月和12个月收集自我报告的结果指标。主要结果是基线后12个月时的抑郁(通过修订的流行病学研究中心抑郁量表测量)和IPV暴露(通过针对妇女的暴力严重程度量表测量)。次要结果包括创伤后应激障碍、心理虐待、决策冲突、安全行为以及关系中的危险。
这项试验将提供关于安全规划、改善心理健康、减少暴力以及减少与虐待关系中的安全相关的决策冲突之间潜在关系的急需信息。这种新颖的基于网络的安全决策辅助干预可能提供一种具有成本效益、易于获取的安全规划资源,可被多个健康学科和倡导者转化为临床和社区实践。该试验还将提供关于处于虐待关系中的女性如何通过互联网安全获取安全信息和资源的信息。最后,该试验将告知其他研究团队全自动招募、资格筛选、同意和保留程序的可行性和可接受性。
该试验于2012年7月3日在澳大利亚新西兰临床试验注册中心注册,注册号为ACTRN12612000708853 。