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Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine 8/2011

01-08-2011 | Original Research

Intimate Partner Violence Identification and Response: Time for a Change in Strategy

Authors: Karin V. Rhodes, MD, MS, Catherine L. Kothari, MA, Melissa Dichter, MSW, PhD, Catherine Cerulli, JD, PhD, James Wiley, PhD, Steve Marcus, PhD

Published in: Journal of General Internal Medicine | Issue 8/2011

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Abstract

BACKGROUND

While victims of intimate partner violence (IPV) present to health care settings for a variety of complaints; rates and predictors of case identification and intervention are unknown.

OBJECTIVE

Examine emergency department (ED) case finding and response within a known population of abused women.

DESIGN

Retrospective longitudinal cohort study.

SUBJECTS

Police-involved female victims of IPV in a semi-rural Midwestern county.

MAIN MEASURES

We linked police, prosecutor, and medical record data to examine characteristics of ED identification and response from 1999–2002; bivariate analyses and logistic regression analyses accounted for the nesting of subjects’ with multiple visits.

RESULTS

IPV victims (N = 993) generated 3,426 IPV-related police incidents (mean 3.61, median 3, range 1–17) over the 4-year study period; 785 (79%) generated 4,306 ED visits (mean 7.17, median 5, range 1–87), which occurred after the date of a documented IPV assault. Only 384 (9%) ED visits occurred within a week of a police-reported IPV incident. IPV identification in the ED was associated with higher violence severity, being childless and underinsured, more police incidents (mean: 4.2 vs 3.3), and more ED visits (mean: 10.6 vs 5.5) over the 4 years. The majority of ED visits occurring after a documented IPV incident were for medical complaints (3,378, 78.4%), and 72% of this cohort were never identified as victims of abuse. IPV identification was associated with the day of a police incident, transportation by police, self-disclosure of “domestic assault,” and chart documentation of mental health and substance abuse issues. When IPV was identified, ED staff provided legally useful documentation (86%), police contact (50%), and social worker involvement (45%), but only assessed safety in 33% of the women and referred them to victim services 25% of the time.

CONCLUSION

The majority of police-identified IPV victims frequently use the ED for health care, but are unlikely to be identified or receive any intervention in that setting.
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Metadata
Title
Intimate Partner Violence Identification and Response: Time for a Change in Strategy
Authors
Karin V. Rhodes, MD, MS
Catherine L. Kothari, MA
Melissa Dichter, MSW, PhD
Catherine Cerulli, JD, PhD
James Wiley, PhD
Steve Marcus, PhD
Publication date
01-08-2011
Publisher
Springer-Verlag
Published in
Journal of General Internal Medicine / Issue 8/2011
Print ISSN: 0884-8734
Electronic ISSN: 1525-1497
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11606-011-1662-4

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