Domestic Violence/Abuse and Health Research Group (DVAHG), Centre for Academic Primary Care, Bristol Medical School, University of Bristol, Canynge Hall, 39 Whatley Road, Bristol, BS8 2PS, UK.
Safelives, Suite 2a, Whitefriars, Lewins Mead, Bristol, BS1 2NT, UK.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2020 Feb 21;20(1):129. doi: 10.1186/s12913-020-4924-1.
Health services are often the first point of professional contact for people who have experienced domestic violence and abuse. We report on the evaluation of a multi-site, hospital-based advocacy intervention for survivors of domestic violence and abuse. Independent Domestic Violence Advisors (IDVAs), who provide survivors with support around safety, criminal justice, and health and wellbeing, were located in five hospitals in England between 2012 and 2015 in emergency departments and maternity services. We present views about IDVAs' approaches to tackling domestic violence and abuse, how the IDVA service worked in practice, and factors that hindered and facilitated engagement with survivors.
We adopted a convenience sampling approach and invited participation from all who offered to take part within the study timeframe. Sixty-four healthcare professionals, IDVAs, IDVA service managers, and commissioners at all sites were interviewed. Interviews were analysed using a thematic approach: familiarising ourselves with the data through repeated readings and noting initial ideas; generating initial codes through double coding notable features of the data across the dataset; collating codes into potential themes; and reviewing themes to ensure they captured the essence of the data.
Two key themes emerged. The first was Hospital-based IDVAs fulfil several crucial roles. This theme highlighted that healthcare professionals thought the hospital-based IDVA service was valuable because it enhanced their skills, knowledge, and confidence in asking about domestic violence and abuse. It enabled them to immediately refer and provide support to patients who might have otherwise been lost along a referral pathway. It also reached survivors who might otherwise have remained hidden. The second theme was Success hinges on a range of structural factors. This theme illustrated the importance of ongoing domestic violence and abuse training for staff, the IDVA having private and dedicated space, and the service being embedded in hospital infrastructure (e.g. featuring it in hospital-wide policies and enabling IDVAs access to medical records).
Hospital-based IDVAs offer a unique and valued way to respond to domestic violence and abuse in a healthcare setting. Further work must now be done to explore how to implement the service sustainably.
对于经历过家庭暴力和虐待的人来说,卫生服务通常是他们与专业人员接触的第一站。我们报告了一项多地点、基于医院的倡导干预措施对家庭暴力和虐待幸存者的评估。独立的家庭暴力顾问 (IDVA) 为幸存者提供有关安全、刑事司法以及健康和福利的支持,他们于 2012 年至 2015 年期间在英格兰的五家医院的急诊部门和妇产科服务中设立。我们介绍了 IDVA 处理家庭暴力和虐待的方法、IDVA 服务在实践中的运作方式,以及阻碍和促进与幸存者接触的因素。
我们采用便利抽样方法,邀请所有在研究时间范围内提供参与的人参加。所有地点的 64 名医疗保健专业人员、IDVA、IDVA 服务经理和专员都接受了采访。通过反复阅读和记录数据中明显的初始想法,我们使用主题分析方法分析访谈:通过对数据集内数据的明显特征进行双重编码,生成初始代码;将代码整理成潜在主题;并审查主题,以确保它们捕捉到数据的本质。
出现了两个关键主题。第一个主题是“基于医院的 IDVA 履行了几个关键角色”。这一主题强调,医疗保健专业人员认为基于医院的 IDVA 服务很有价值,因为它增强了他们询问家庭暴力和虐待的技能、知识和信心。它使他们能够立即向那些可能在转介途径中迷失的患者提供支持和转介。它还接触到了那些可能仍然隐藏的幸存者。第二个主题是“成功取决于一系列结构因素”。这一主题说明了为员工提供持续的家庭暴力和虐待培训的重要性、IDVA 拥有私人和专用空间以及服务嵌入医院基础设施(例如将其纳入医院范围的政策并使 IDVA 能够访问医疗记录)的重要性。
基于医院的 IDVA 为在医疗保健环境中应对家庭暴力和虐待提供了一种独特而有价值的方式。现在必须进一步努力探索如何可持续地实施该服务。