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Journal Article

Citation

Sitterding HA, Adera T, Shields-Fobbs E. J. Contin. Educ. Health Prof. 2003; 23(1): 54-63.

Affiliation

Child Transportation Safety Program, Center for Injury and Violence Prevention, Virginia Department of Health, 1500 East Main Street, Room 105, Richmond, VA 23219, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2003, John Wiley and Sons)

DOI

10.1002/chp.1340230109

PMID

12739260

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Spouse/partner violence is a major public health problem that affects 3 to 6 million women per year. Many studies show that the majority of health care practitioners do not detect or respond to cases of spouse/partner violence in their practice. Research suggests that there are potential barriers to reporting or detecting this problem. A barrier often cited is lack of proper education or training regarding spouse/partner violence. The objective of this study was to determine if physicians who received spouse/partner violence education at various stages of their careers were more likely to screen patients for spouse/partner violence. METHODS: A survey was developed and administered to family physicians and obstetricians/gynecologists in Virginia. The data were analyzed to determine screening practice and spouse/partner violence education among respondents. Four different educational opportunities were analyzed to determine potential determinants of screening. RESULTS: All respondents who had spouse/partner violence education were more likely to screen every patient than those who were lacking this education. Receiving lectures during residency training was found to be a significant predictor of screening every patient for spouse/partner violence among respondents. DISCUSSION: Screening every patient for exposure to spouse/partner violence is the ideal situation. This study indicates that education about spouse/partner violence has a significant impact on screening tendencies if provided during a physician's residency program.


Language: en

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