
@article{ref1,
title="Increasing emergency physician recognition of domestic violence",
journal="Annals of emergency medicine",
year="1996",
author="Olson, Lars and Anctil, C. and Fullerton, L. and Brillman, J. and Arbuckle, J. and Sklar, David P.",
volume="27",
number="6",
pages="741-746",
abstract="STUDY OBJECTIVE: To determine whether recognition of domestic violence in the emergency department is affected by restructuring of the ED chart to include a specific question about domestic violence, to evaluate whether training concerning domestic violence further increases its recognition, and to develop a profile of women who present to the ED as a result of domestic violence. METHODS: We collected prospective data on all females aged 15 to 70 years who presented to an urban Level I trauma center during a 3-month period. Two keywords were used to define domestic violence: (1) mechanism (eg, kicked, hit, pushed) and (2) perpetrator (eg, current/former boyfriend, spouse). We used the first month to define the baseline number of domestic violence cases. We modified charts in the second and third months (intervention months) to include, &quot;Is the patient a victim of domestic violence?&quot; In addition, the third month included a 1-hour educational lecture on the identification of domestic violence in the ED. RESULTS: We identified 123 cases of domestic violence from a survey population of 4,073: 25 (2.0%) in the baseline month, 49 (3.4%) in the chart-modification month, and 49 (3.6%) in the education month. The proportion of cases identified during the intervention months was 1.8 times higher than during the control month (relative risk [RR], 1.78; 95% confidence interval [CI], 1.15 to 2.75), but did not differ between each other (RR, 1.06; 95% CI, .72 to 1.57). Women identified as domestic violence cases ranged in age from 15 to 61 years (median, 28.5 years). Most of the identified domestic violence patients presented with a triage classification of assault (54.5%), trauma (8.1%), or abdominal complaints (7.3%). Triage complaint differed for domestic violence and non-domestic violence cases (chi 2 = 830; P < .0001). Nearly one third of domestic violence patients (31.7%) presented between 11 PM and 6:59 AM, compared with 19.0% of non-domestic violence patients (chi 2 = 12.4; P = .005). CONCLUSION: Modification of the chart significantly increased the recognition rate of domestic violence. An education intervention did not significantly improve this rate. The profile of a woman presenting to the ED differs from those of other women with respect to chief complaint and time of presentation.",
language="",
issn="0196-0644",
doi="",
url="http://dx.doi.org/"
}