The Emergency Department Response to Women Experiencing Intimate Partner Violence: Insights From Interviews With Clinicians in Australia.
Angela J DawsonChris RossiterAnna DoabBernadine RomeroLesley FitzpatrickMargaret Fry FryPublished in: Academic emergency medicine : official journal of the Society for Academic Emergency Medicine (2019)
Emergency departments can provide caring environments for women experiencing IPV. Effective interprofessional teamwork across nursing, medical, and social work professionals may mitigate the need for formal screening tools. Supportive workforce environments can improve staff understanding, reduce stigma, enhance appropriate treatment, and counsel health professionals experiencing violence. However, staff training and advocacy and referral relationships with local programs require strengthening. A connected multisystems-level response is required to coordinate and resource services for all affected by violence.
Keyphrases
- intimate partner violence
- mental health
- healthcare
- emergency department
- polycystic ovary syndrome
- public health
- primary care
- pregnancy outcomes
- mental illness
- palliative care
- long term care
- breast cancer risk
- pregnant women
- hiv aids
- quality improvement
- human immunodeficiency virus
- health insurance
- skeletal muscle
- replacement therapy
- adverse drug
- affordable care act
- smoking cessation
- drug induced