Literature DB >> 23350912

Why abused women do not seek professional help: a qualitative study.

Gert-Jan Prosman1, Sylvie H Lo Fo Wong, Antoine L M Lagro-Janssen.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: We aimed to gain insight into the process of help seeking of abused women visiting their family physician (FP).
SETTING: Family practice in Rotterdam, the Netherlands.
METHOD: We used a qualitative method with interviews in a sample of 14 abused women, identified in an earlier cross-sectional survey with the Composite Abuse Scale (CAS) and the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI). This qualitative method with semi-structured interviews was used to obtain information on the process of seeking help.
RESULTS: Unawareness of the impact of abuse on themselves and their children, unfamiliarity and negative experiences with professionals and fear for their partner hampers abused women to seek professional help. Our study reveals that abused women need informal support by family and friends to ask for professional support. Current health care does not fit into the needs of abused women during the abuse they want more practical support, after the abuse they need also psychological help. In our study, FPs and mothers pay less attention to the impact of witnessing violence on children.
CONCLUSION: When women are unaware of the negative consequences of IPV, the physical and mental well-being of themselves and their children they do not ask for professional support. Abused women view informal support is important in the changing process. FPs should be trained to pay more attention to informal support and be alert to children's well-being.
© 2013 Nordic College of Caring Science. Published by Blackwell Publishing Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  children; family practice; help seeking; intimate partner violence; qualitative method; woman

Mesh:

Year:  2013        PMID: 23350912     DOI: 10.1111/scs.12025

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Scand J Caring Sci        ISSN: 0283-9318


  10 in total

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6.  Disclosure of domestic violence in mental health settings: a qualitative meta-synthesis.

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7.  Mentor mother support for mothers experiencing intimate partner violence in family practice: A qualitative study of three different perspectives on the facilitators and barriers of implementation.

Authors:  Maartje J W Loeffen; Jasper Daemen; Fred P J F Wester; Miranda G H Laurant; Sylvie H Lo Fo Wong; Antoine L M Lagro-Janssen
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8.  Conceptualising the separation from an abusive partner as a multifactorial, non-linear, dynamic process: A parallel with Newton's laws of motion.

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9.  Broken Toughness: Iranian Older Adults' Perceptions of Abuse.

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10.  Disclosure of abuse among female patients within general psychiatric care - a cross sectional study.

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  10 in total

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