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Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine 8/2007

01-08-2007 | Original Article

Abused Women Disclose Partner Interference with Health Care: An Unrecognized Form of Battering

Authors: Laura A. McCloskey, PhD, Corrine M. Williams, ScD, Erika Lichter, ScD, Megan Gerber, MD, MPH, Michael L. Ganz, PhD, Robert Sege, MD, PhD

Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine | Issue 8/2007

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Abstract

BACKGROUND

Some providers observe that partners interfere with health care visits or treatment. There are no systematic investigations of the prevalence of or circumstances surrounding partner interference with health care and intimate partner violence (IPV).

OBJECTIVE

To determine whether abused women report partner interference with their health care and to describe the co-occurring risk factors and health impact of such interference.

DESIGN

A written survey of women attending health care clinics across 5 different medical departments (e.g., emergency, primary care, obstetrics–gynecology, pediatrics, addiction recovery) housed in 8 hospital and clinic sites in Metropolitan Boston.

PARTICIPANTS

Women outpatients (N = 2,027) ranging in age, 59% White, 38% married, 22.6% born outside the U.S.

MEASUREMENT

Questions from the Severity of Violence and Abuse Assessment Scale, the SF-36, and questions about demographics.

RESULTS

One in 20 women outpatients (4.6%) reported that their partners prevented them from seeking or interfered with health care. Among women with past-year physical abuse (n = 276), 17% reported that a partner interfered with their health care in contrast to 2% of women without abuse (adjusted odds ratios [OR] = 7.5). Further adjusted risk markers for partner interference included having less than a high school education (OR = 3.2), being born outside the U.S. (OR = 2.0), and visiting the clinic with a man attending (OR = 1.9). Partner interference raised the odds of women having poor health (OR = 1.8).

CONCLUSIONS

Partner interference with health care is a significant problem for women who are in abusive relationships and poses an obstacle to health care. Health care providers should be alert to signs of patient noncompliance or missed appointments as stemming from abusive partner control tactics.
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Metadata
Title
Abused Women Disclose Partner Interference with Health Care: An Unrecognized Form of Battering
Authors
Laura A. McCloskey, PhD
Corrine M. Williams, ScD
Erika Lichter, ScD
Megan Gerber, MD, MPH
Michael L. Ganz, PhD
Robert Sege, MD, PhD
Publication date
01-08-2007
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
Journal of General Internal Medicine / Issue 8/2007
Print ISSN: 0884-8734
Electronic ISSN: 1525-1497
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-007-0199-z

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