St Ivany Amanda, Kools Susan, Sharps Phyllis, Bullock Linda
Department of Community and Family Medicine, Dartmouth College.
The Johns Hopkins University School of Nursing.
J Forensic Nurs. 2018 Oct/Dec;14(4):198-205. doi: 10.1097/JFN.0000000000000220.
The aim of this study was to understand the social context of the lives of women who experienced a head injury from intimate partner violence.
Sixty percent to 92% of survivors of intimate partner violence receive head trauma during the abuse. Little research exists regarding the episodes of abuse when women receive a head injury, or the reasons women might not seek medical care for the head injury or the abuse.
Twenty-one interviews from nine women who self-reported passing out from being hit in the head were analyzed using thematic analysis.
Themes of extreme control and manipulation from abusers emerged, and women described living with instability from cycles of incarceration, drug and alcohol use, and fear of losing their children. Women did not receive medical care for head injury because the abusers often used forced sex immediately after the head injury to instill fear and authority.
Hitting women in the head is not only about physical abuse, but also about exerting dominance and creating an environment of extreme control. Forensic nurses are uniquely positioned to screen for head injuries during initial assessments and follow-up visits and connect women with appropriate resources.
本研究旨在了解遭受亲密伴侣暴力导致头部受伤的女性的生活社会背景。
60%至92%的亲密伴侣暴力幸存者在受虐期间头部受到创伤。关于女性头部受伤时的虐待事件,或者女性可能不为头部受伤或虐待寻求医疗护理的原因,相关研究很少。
对9名自称因头部被击中而昏厥的女性进行了21次访谈,并采用主题分析法进行分析。
出现了施虐者极端控制和操纵的主题,女性描述了因监禁、吸毒和酗酒循环以及担心失去孩子而生活不稳定的情况。女性没有因头部受伤接受医疗护理,因为施虐者经常在头部受伤后立即使用强迫性行为来灌输恐惧和权威。
击打女性头部不仅涉及身体虐待,还涉及施加支配地位和营造极端控制的环境。法医护士在初次评估和随访期间筛查头部受伤情况并为女性联系适当资源方面具有独特优势。