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Journal Article

Citation

Sutherland MA, Hutchinson MK. Appl. Nurs. Res. 2018; 39: 217-219.

Affiliation

Boston College, William F. Connell School of Nursing, Chestnut Hill, MA 02467, United States. Electronic address: kathy.hutchinson@bc.edu.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2018, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.apnr.2017.11.031

PMID

29422162

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Female college students experience higher rates of intimate partner violence (IPV) and sexual violence (SV) compared to men of all ages, older women and young women who are not attending college. Experts and medical organizations have issued recommendations that health care providers should routinely screen women for IPV and SV. However, most female college students report they are not being screened for IPV and SV at college health centers.

AIM: This exploratory study sought to examine the IPV and SV screening practices of college health care providers and identify individual and organizational influences using a cross-sectional, quantitative survey design.

METHODS: Sixty-four health care providers (physicians, nurse practitioners and registered nurses) from five colleges and universities in the northeastern U.S. were invited to participate in an anonymous, web-based survey about their IPV/SV-related screening practices and beliefs, and organizational characteristics of their college health centers.

RESULTS: Twenty-six health care providers completed surveys (56% response rate). The median reported IPV/SV screening rate was 15%. More IPV/SV screening was reported by nurse practitioners, providers at state colleges, and by those in health centers that prioritized IPV/SV screening and had greater organizational capacity for change.

CONCLUSIONS: College health centers represent unique, yet often missed, opportunities to screen for IPV/SV in a high-risk population. Provider- and organization-level influences should be incorporated into future interventions to improve IPV/SV screening in college health centers. Future studies with larger numbers of colleges and providers are needed to better understand organizational influences and identify mediators and moderators of effects.

Copyright © 2017 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.


Language: en

Keywords

College women; Intimate partner violence; Sexual violence; Violence screening

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