Department of Family Medicine and Primary Care, The University of Hong Kong, HongKong, China.
Department of General Practice, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia.
BMC Fam Pract. 2020 Jul 30;21(1):155. doi: 10.1186/s12875-020-01228-4.
Domestic violence is common in the community. Many of its victims present to primary care physicians (PCPs) but are not being recognized and managed. The barriers, with specific reference to a Chinese cultural context, were investigated earlier. This paper explored the factors which facilitated the process of recognizing and managing suspected cases of domestic violence by PCPs in Hong Kong.
Four focus group interviews were conducted to explore in-depth the experiences of PCPs in recognition, management and referral of domestic violence cases from which facilitators were identified. The relevant themes were then investigated in a questionnaire survey with 504 PCPs working in public and private sectors.
The focus group participants emphasized mood symptoms as useful indicators for probable abuse and continuity of care was important to unmask issues of domestic violence. The top facilitators perceived by the respondents of the survey included: a trusting doctor-patient relationship (99.8%), good communication skills (99.0%), patients' unexplained bruises (96.3%), medical history (94.6%), and mood symptoms (94.4%). Further, the survey found that PCPs with longer years of practice, a medical degree obtained from Western countries, and postgraduate training in family counselling or psychological medicine perceived more facilitators in managing domestic violence.
Without a local screening policy and training protocol to manage domestic violence, PCPs regarded their skills in mental healthcare and good relationships with patients as the key facilitators. While training in mental health care helps PCPs manage domestic violence, a specific protocol emphasizing medical-social collaboration is anticipated to facilitate them to take a more proactive and effective stance from screening to management.
家庭暴力在社区中很常见。许多受害者会向初级保健医生(PCP)就诊,但并未得到识别和处理。此前已经研究了特定于中国文化背景的障碍。本文探讨了促进香港 PCP 识别和处理疑似家庭暴力病例的因素。
进行了 4 次焦点小组访谈,以深入探讨 PCP 在识别、管理和转介家庭暴力案件方面的经验,从中确定了促进因素。然后,对在公立和私营部门工作的 504 名 PCP 进行了一项问卷调查,以调查相关主题。
焦点小组参与者强调情绪症状是可能遭受虐待的有用指标,连续性护理对于揭示家庭暴力问题很重要。受访者认为最重要的促进因素包括:医患信任关系(99.8%)、良好的沟通技巧(99.0%)、患者不明原因的瘀伤(96.3%)、病史(94.6%)和情绪症状(94.4%)。此外,调查还发现,从业年限较长、在西方国家获得医学学位以及接受过家庭咨询或心理医学研究生培训的 PCP 认为在处理家庭暴力方面有更多的促进因素。
由于没有本地筛查政策和管理家庭暴力的培训方案,PCP 将他们在心理健康护理方面的技能和与患者的良好关系视为关键促进因素。虽然心理健康护理培训有助于 PCP 管理家庭暴力,但预计强调医疗-社会合作的特定方案将有助于他们从筛查到管理采取更积极有效的立场。