| Literature DB >> 26872503 |
Ellen Poleshuck1, Catherine Mazzotta2, Kathryn Resch1, Adriana Rogachefsky1, Kelly Bellenger1, Christina Raimondi1, Jennifer Thompson Stone1, Catherine Cerulli1.
Abstract
Intimate partner violence (IPV) is a public health issue with complex physical health, mental health and social consequences that can exacerbate survivors' barriers to health care engagement and support. Furthermore, health care professionals are often unaware of or feel ill-equipped to address survivors' complex needs. Depression and chronic pain are particularly prevalent co-occurring problems for survivors and can impede engagement and outcomes in traditional health care. This study's purpose was to understand what interventions might be more responsive to survivors' myriad needs, particularlly those with depression and pain. Survivors were involved with the design, execution, analysis, and interpretation of results, based on community-based participatory research principles. Intervention development happened in two phases: the first consisted of focus groups with survivors to inform the intervention and the second included intervention design, informed by a community advisory board (CAB). Thirty-one survivors participated in Phase 1, and they reported preferring a range of support including formal help-seeking, informal coping strategies, and spirituality. In Phase 2, the CAB (comprised of survivors, health care professionals, and researchers) identified three distinct aspects of a comprehensive IPV intervention: (a) education regarding both the complex health issues and available local resources; (b) an integrated consultation service for providers to seek recommendations for responding to the full spectrum of survivors' needs; and (c) a trauma-informed, accessible clinic. Academic medical centers could not have designed this intervention in isolation; survivors and providers played an integral part of this process, and continue to inform our current work.Entities:
Keywords: anything related to domestic violence; domestic violence; intervention/treatment; mental health and violence
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26872503 DOI: 10.1177/0886260516628810
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Interpers Violence ISSN: 0886-2605