Literature DB >> 9008585

Intimate partner abuse: developing a framework for change in medical education.

C Warshaw1.   

Abstract

Addressing domestic violence presents unique challenges for individual physicians and for the institutions that shape medical education and practice. In addition to the need to acquire new knowledge and skills, clinicians must confront the feelings and social beliefs that shape their responses to patients, develop new frameworks for understanding complex social issues, and generate collaborative models for working in partnership with community groups. Educators, in turn, must provide training experiences that foster the development of those understandings and skills, institutional structures that support their integration into routine practice, and faculty who model nonabusive behaviors in all aspects of training and medical care. Expanding traditional medical paradigms to address the multiple dimensions of abuse can lay the groundwork for such a process. In addition, students need to be encouraged to develop awareness of the larger social forces that affect all of our lives and health, and to recognize their potential roles as community members in ending domestic violence. This article offers suggestions for changes in the structure of medical education as part of generating a health care system contribution to ending abuse in this society. Creating a model for fostering nonabusive relationships at individual and institutional levels within the health care system can provide a paradigm for transforming the conditions under which abuse is tolerated.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Americas; Crime; Delivery Of Health Care; Developed Countries; Domestic Violence--women; Education; Health; Health Services; Medicine; North America; Northern America; Schools; Schools, Medical; Social Problems; United States; Women

Mesh:

Year:  1997        PMID: 9008585

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acad Med        ISSN: 1040-2446            Impact factor:   6.893


  6 in total

1.  Simplifying physicians' response to domestic violence.

Authors:  B Gerbert; J Moe; N Caspers; P Salber; M Feldman; K Herzig; A Bronstone
Journal:  West J Med       Date:  2000-05

2.  The Voices of survivors documentary: using patient narrative to educate physicians about domestic violence.

Authors:  Christina Nicolaidis
Journal:  J Gen Intern Med       Date:  2002-02       Impact factor: 5.128

3.  Measuring the impact of the Voices of Survivors program on health care workers' attitudes toward survivors of intimate partner violence.

Authors:  Christina Nicolaidis; MaryAnn Curry; Martha Gerrity
Journal:  J Gen Intern Med       Date:  2005-08       Impact factor: 5.128

4.  Mental health, demographic, and risk behavior profiles of pregnant survivors of childhood and adult abuse.

Authors:  Julia S Seng; Mickey Sperlich; Lisa Kane Low
Journal:  J Midwifery Womens Health       Date:  2008 Nov-Dec       Impact factor: 2.388

Review 5.  General practitioner management of intimate partner abuse and the whole family: qualitative study.

Authors:  Angela Taft; Dorothy H Broom; David Legge
Journal:  BMJ       Date:  2004-02-06

6.  Training US health care professionals on human trafficking: where do we go from here?

Authors:  Clydette Powell; Kirsten Dickins; Hanni Stoklosa
Journal:  Med Educ Online       Date:  2017
  6 in total

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