McCauley J, Yurk R A, Jenckes M W, Ford D E
Division of General Internal Medicine, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 1998 Aug;13(8):549-55. doi: 10.1046/j.1525-1497.1998.00166.x.
To explore the attitudes and experiences of abused women to identify characteristics that helped or hindered abuse disclosure to clinicians and to determine how women viewed potential interventions to improve detection and treatment in a medical setting.
Focus group data conducted and analyzed with qualitative methodology.
Three community-based mental health centers and one women's shelter.
Twenty-one women in group therapy for domestic violence.
Eighteen (86%) of the 21 women had seen their "regular doctor" in the prior year; only 1 in 3 had discussed the abuse with the clinician. The major discussion themes were medical problems that were exacerbated with abuse, lack of ability to access medical care due to abuser interference, emotional attitudes about abuse that acted as barriers to disclosure, clinician characteristics that helped or hindered disclosure, and treatment experiences and preferences. Women described how their medical problems began or worsened during the abusive period. one in three women described how abusers blocked them from receiving medical care. Women reported intense shame about the abuse and described their self-denial of abuse. Women stated they were inclined to discuss abuse if they felt the clinician was perceived to be caring, was easy to talk to, had a protective manner, or if the clinician offered a follow-up visit. There was no consistent clinician gender preference among the women. One in four women had received psychotropic medication for problems associated with abuse. Many feared addiction, or a loss of alertness, increasing their risk for more abuse.
Many abused women experience worsening health and seek medical care; most do not volunteer a history of violence even to their regular clinicians. Many of the barriers to disclosure of abuse could be overcome by a physician's knowledge of the link between abuse and medical illness, an understanding of the women's emotions about abuse, and her treatment preferences.
探讨受虐妇女的态度和经历,以确定有助于或阻碍向临床医生披露虐待情况的特征,并确定妇女如何看待在医疗环境中改善检测和治疗的潜在干预措施。
采用定性方法进行和分析焦点小组数据。
三个社区心理健康中心和一个妇女庇护所。
21名参加家庭暴力团体治疗的妇女。
21名妇女中有18名(86%)在过去一年中看过她们的“常规医生”;只有三分之一的人与临床医生讨论过虐待问题。主要讨论主题包括因虐待而加剧的医疗问题、由于施虐者干扰而无法获得医疗护理、作为披露障碍的对虐待的情感态度、有助于或阻碍披露的临床医生特征,以及治疗经历和偏好。妇女们描述了她们的医疗问题在虐待期间是如何开始或恶化的。三分之一的妇女描述了施虐者如何阻止她们接受医疗护理。妇女们报告说对虐待感到极度羞耻,并描述了她们对虐待的自我否认。妇女们表示,如果她们觉得临床医生有爱心、易于交谈、有保护态度,或者临床医生提供随访,她们就倾向于讨论虐待问题。这些妇女中没有一致的临床医生性别偏好。四分之一的妇女因与虐待相关的问题接受过精神药物治疗。许多人担心成瘾或失去警觉,从而增加她们遭受更多虐待的风险。
许多受虐妇女健康状况恶化并寻求医疗护理;大多数人甚至没有向她们的常规临床医生透露暴力史。医生了解虐待与疾病之间的联系、理解妇女对虐待的情绪以及她的治疗偏好,许多虐待披露的障碍是可以克服的。