
@article{ref1,
title="Intimate partner violence screening and response in New South Wales emergency departments: a multi-site feasibility study",
journal="Emergency medicine Australasia",
year="2020",
author="Spangaro, Jo and Vajda, Jacqualine and Klineberg, Emily and Lin, Sen and Griffiths, Chris and Saberi, Elham and Field, Emma and Miller, Alex and McNamara, Lorna",
volume="ePub",
number="ePub",
pages="ePub-ePub",
abstract="OBJECTIVE: To test feasibility of a systematic approach to routine screening and response for intimate partner violence among women presenting to three New South Wales EDs. <br><br>METHODS: This prospective feasibility study was conducted over 6 months in two rural and one major tertiary metropolitan ED in New South Wales. Women aged 16-45 years triaged category 3-5 (treat within 30 min/1 h/2 h), who could be approached privately, were screened for intimate partner violence using the validated HITS (Hurts, Insults, Threatens and Screams or Swears) tool. The follow-up protocol for patients who disclosed abuse, specified a social work/psychology (psychosocial) response within 1 h. Outcomes of interest were screening rates of eligible presentations, disclosures of abuse, psycho-social referral and responses. Interviews conducted with ED medical directors and nurse unit managers at each site explored barriers and facilitators. <br><br>RESULTS: A total of 1047 women (11.4% of eligible presentations) completed screening at their first or subsequent presentation. Of 868 women screened on first presentation, 18% (n = 154) disclosed intimate partner violence, with no significant differences by age group, country of birth, triage category or time/day of arrival. Key barriers to screening were high patient volume, absence of electronic prompts and lack of privacy. Of those who screened positive 49% (n = 75) received an immediate, on-site psycho-social response. <br><br>CONCLUSION: The present study demonstrates that it is both possible and relevant, given the 18% disclosure rate, to screen women in relation intimate partner violence in EDs and provide a psycho-social response within 1 h. More needs to be done to address barriers to screening to provide opportunities for early intervention.<br><br>© 2020 Australasian College for Emergency Medicine.<p /> <p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="1742-6731",
doi="10.1111/1742-6723.13452",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1742-6723.13452"
}