| Literature DB >> 24821132 |
Lorna J O'Doherty1, Angela Taft, Kelsey Hegarty, Jean Ramsay, Leslie L Davidson, Gene Feder.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To examine the effectiveness of screening for intimate partner violence conducted within healthcare settings to determine whether or not screening increases identification and referral to support agencies, improves women's wellbeing, decreases further violence, or causes harm.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2014 PMID: 24821132 PMCID: PMC4018471 DOI: 10.1136/bmj.g2913
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ ISSN: 0959-8138

Fig 1 Flow diagram for selection of studies of screening for intimate partner violence in healthcare settings
Risk of bias summary: review authors’ judgments about each risk of bias item for each included study of screening women for intimate partner violence in healthcare settings (adapted from Taft et al12)
| Random sequence generation (selection bias) | Allocation concealment (selection bias) | Blinding of participants and personnel (performance bias) | Blinding of outcome assessment (detection bias) | Incomplete outcome data (attrition bias) | Selective reporting (reporting bias) | Other bias | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Ahmad, 2009 | Low | Low | High | Low | High | Unclear | High |
| Carroll, 2005 | Low | Unclear | High | High | High | High | Unclear |
| Humphreys, 2011 | Low | Low | High | High | Unclear | Unclear | High |
| Kataoka, 2010 | Low | Unclear | Unclear | Low | Low | Low | High |
| Klevens, 2012a | Low | Low | Low | High | Low | Unclear | High |
| Koziol-McLain, 2010 | Low | Low | High | Low | Unclear | Unclear | Low |
| MacMillan, 2006 | Low | High | High | High | Unclear | Low | High |
| MacMillan, 2009 | Low | High | High | Low | Low | Low | High |
| Rhodes, 2002 | High | Unclear | High | Low | Unclear | Low | High |
| Rhodes, 2006 | Low | Low | High | Unclear | Unclear | High | High |
| Trautman, 2007 | High | High | High | Unclear | Unclear | Unclear | High |

Fig 2 Effect of screening v usual care on identification of intimate partner violence in healthcare settings

Fig 3 Effect of screening versus comparison on referrals for intimate partner violence in healthcare settings
Screening for intimate partner violence compared with no screening or screening for another purpose
| Outcomes | Illustrative comparative benefit* (95% CI) | Relative effect‡ (95% CI) | No of participants (studies) | Quality of evidence§ | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Assumed benefit: unscreened per 1000 | Corresponding benefit: screened per 1000 | Absolute benefit per 1000† | ||||
| Identification | 32 | 74 (44 to 124) | 42 (12 to 92) | 2.33 (1.39 to 3.89) | 3564 (6) | Moderate |
| Referral | 7 | 19 (7 to 50) | 12 (0 to 43) | 2.67 (0.99 to 7.20) | 1400 (3) | Low |
*Assumed benefit was from sum of identified or referred but unscreened women and calculated for rate per 1000. Corresponding benefit and confidence intervals calculated by multiplying assumed benefit by risk ratio (RR) and CIs of unscreened to screened women.
†Absolute benefit calculated with formula 1000 × ACR × (1−RR) where ACR is assumed control risk and based on number per 1000.17
‡Risk ratio.
§GRADE Working Group grades of evidence.18

Fig 4 Effect of screening on identification of women experiencing intimate partner violence by location subgroup