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Journal Article

Citation

Paranjape A, Tucker A, McKenzie-Mack L, Thompson N, Kaslow N. Patient Educ. Couns. 2007; 68(2): 167-172.

Affiliation

Section of General Internal Medicine, Temple University School of Medicine, 1st Floor, Jones Hall, 1316 W. Ontario Street, Philadelphia, PA 19140, United States.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2007, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.pec.2007.05.019

PMID

17644300

PMCID

PMC2077087

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Little is known about how older African American women define family violence (FV) and what FV survivors might expect from their healthcare providers. The purpose of this study was to understand how these women define FV, where they seek help for FV, and what barriers they face in these efforts. METHODS: We conducted 6 focus groups with 30 African American women over the age of 50, including some FV survivors, at a large, inner-city public hospital. RESULTS: Participants defined FV broadly, citing examples of abuse (physical, sexual, emotional and financial) and neglect. Spiritual sources were cited over physicians as being available to help FV survivors. Barriers to receiving assistance included negative encounters with physicians, lack of trust in the system and dearth of age-appropriate resources. CONCLUSIONS: For older African American women, FV takes many forms of which many may not be obvious during the clinical encounter. Like younger FV survivors, they expect physicians to serve as a resource for FV. PRACTICE IMPLICATIONS: Physicians caring for older African American women need to remember to ask them about FV, and when making referrals for abuse and neglect, consider offering referrals to pastoral care if appropriate.


Language: en

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