| Literature DB >> 29705757 |
Natalia V Lewis1,2, Gene S Feder1, Emma Howarth3, Eszter Szilassy1, Jill R McTavish4, Harriet L MacMillan4,5, Nadine Wathen6.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To synthesise evidence on the acceptable identification and initial response to children's exposure to intimate partner violence (IPV) from the perspectives of providers and recipients of healthcare and social services.Entities:
Keywords: child protection; public health; qualitative research; social medicine
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29705757 PMCID: PMC5931305 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2017-019761
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Inclusion criteria for selecting studies
| Category | Inclusion criteria |
| Population (further called stakeholders) |
Providers of healthcare (healthcare professionals (HCPs)) or social services (social service professionals (SSPs)) OR Recipients of healthcare or social services (further called patients or clients, respectively): Children (however defined in primary studies) who have been exposed to intimate partner violence (IPV) OR Non-abusing parents of children who have been exposed to IPV |
| Intervention |
Identification of children’ exposure to IPV by any method(s)—screening, case-finding, notification by other services, self-disclosure OR Initial response to children’s exposure to IPV that followed the identification and occurred before referral to another professional or service |
| Phenomena of interest |
Views of and direct experiences with identification and initial response to children’s exposure to IPV |
| Types of studies |
Publication date: database inception to 28 April 2016 AND English language AND Empirical qualitative (standalone or components of mixed-methods research) AND Qualitative methods for data collection and analysis (eg, interviews, focus groups, observations) AND Verbatim quotations from participants AND Papers that have undergone formal peer-review |
SSPs cover a range of services provided to advance adult and child welfare including child protection services.
Figure 1Flow of studies through the review.
Summary characteristics of the 11 studies (16 papers) synthesised (in chronological order)
| Study | Country | Topic | Methodology | Stakeholder group | |||
| Children | Parents | HCPs | SSPs | ||||
| Buckley | Ireland | Experiences of child protection services | Interviews | X | |||
| Black | USA | Interventions for IPV | Interviews | X | X | ||
| Stanley | UK | Police IPV notifications of children’s social services | Interviews | X | X | X | |
| Meyer | Australia | Help-seeking of IPV victims with children | Interviews | X | |||
| Randell | USA | IPV information in healthcare setting | Focus groups | X | |||
| Davidov | USA | Mandatory reporting of children’s exposure to IPV | Secondary analysis of interviews and focus groups | X | X | X | |
| Angelo | Brazil | Experiences of providing care to children exposed to IPV | Interviews | X | |||
| Jenney | Canada | Communication between providers and recipients of child protection service | Interviews and focus groups | X | X | ||
| Szilassy | UK | Experiences of responding to children’s exposure to IPV | Interviews | X | |||
| Clarke and Wydall | UK | Experiences of responding to children’s exposure to IPV | Interviews, focus groups, observations | X | X | X | |
| Morris | Australia | Safety and resilience of children exposed to IPV | Interviews and focus groups | X | X | ||
IPV, intimate partner violence; HCPs, healthcare professionals; SSPs, social service professionals.
Figure 2Methodological quality of the studies as assessed by the modified Critical Appraisal Skills Programme (score range 0–20). Studies scored≥15 are in the top tertile.
Final analytical themes and their definitions
| Final analytical themes with subthemes | Definition | Stakeholder group, study | ||
| Children | Mothers | Professionals | ||
| 1. Precursors for acceptable identification and response | ||||
| 1.1. Satisfying and sustainable relationship | Patients know and trust professionals with whom they develop good long-term relationships. Trusting relationships enable patients to feel safe and comfortable to discuss sensitive issues. |
|
|
|
| 1.2. Desired professional attitudes and skills | When interacting with patients/clients, professionals demonstrate non-judgemental, non-threatening attitudes, show respect, actively listen, validate patient’s accounts, reassure confidentiality and provide practical help. |
|
|
|
| 1.3. Considering mother’s readiness | Professionals acknowledge individual mothers’ readiness to disclose IPV and engage with services, work towards increasing mothers’ readiness and match their approaches to the stage of mothers’ readiness. |
|
| |
| 1.4. Patient materials | Culturally sensitive materials on IPV and children’s exposure to IPV in different languages are displayed in healthcare settings. |
|
| |
| 1.5. Professional training | Professionals receive adequate training on communication with children, indicators of children’s exposure to IPV, especially psychological and non-direct physical IPV, professionals’ role in identifying and responding, documenting and reporting, interagency work. |
|
|
|
| 1.6. Professional resources | Professionals have clear guidance on local IPV resources, what constitutes children’s exposure to IPV, what is reportable and how to document children’s exposure to IPV in a way that keeps the child safe and ensures the safety and confidentiality of the mother. |
| ||
| 1.7. Professional supervision and support | Professionals have skilled supervision and ongoing support for coping with psychological consequences of working with children and mothers exposed to IPV and preventing vicarious trauma |
| ||
| 1.8. Addressing systems’ barriers | Professionals’ work of identifying and responding to children’s exposure to IPV fits into the organisational, local and national context of increased demands on healthcare and social services without commensurate resources. |
| ||
| 2. Acceptable identification | ||||
| 2.1. Space and time | It is ideal to give patients permission, space and time to discuss sensitive matters. |
|
| |
| 2.2. Vocabulary | It is preferable for HCPs to phrase questions about children’s exposure to IPV as a ‘safety-at-home’ matter. |
|
| |
| 2.2. Phased approach | When asking about children’s exposure to IPV, it is ideal for HCPs to initiate the enquiry, adapt it to the context of the consultation and use a phased approach—from presenting symptoms to general safety and well-being, then to safety at home. |
|
|
|
| 3. Acceptable initial response | ||||
| 3.1. Shifting focus | Professionals first focus their responses on the mother-child dyad and shift to the child if he/she is at risk of harm. Professionals need assistance with managing emotional burdens caused by the shift. |
| ||
| 3.2. Emotional support | When responding to disclosure, it is ideal to provide children and parents with encouragement and emotional support. |
|
| |
| 3.3. Education | It is acceptable to educate mothers about the impact of IPV on children, IPV dynamics, professionals’ roles and duties in responding. However, education should not jeopardise patient safety (eg, through sending materials home where the perpetrator can find them). |
|
| |
| 3.4. Signposting | It is acceptable for professionals to give children and mothers information about local IPV services. |
|
|
|
| 4. Conflicting perspectives on engagement with children and management of safety | ||||
| 4.1. Engaging directly with children | Stakeholders’ perspectives on the acceptability of talking directly to children exposed to IPV and seeing them alone are conflicting. Children are absent in the patient-professional communication. Mothers and children want direct engagement with children. Professionals do not see children as patients on their own and feel ill-equipped for communicating with children about IPV. |
|
|
|
| 4.2. Management of safety | Stakeholder preferences regarding risk assessment and safety planning are conflicting. Mothers and children are absent in the management of safety and want to be involved. Professionals are not satisfied with current risk assessment and safety planning approaches and want them to change. |
|
|
|
IPV, intimate partner violence; HCPs, healthcare professionals; SSPs, social care professionals.