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Most women welcome inquiries, but doctors
and nurses rarely ask about it
Domestic violence can be physical,
sexual, or psychological. Physical and sexual violence
by an intimate partner are common problems, affecting
20-50% of women at some stage in life in most populations
surveyed globally.1 Between 3% and 50% of women
have experienced it in the past year.1 Domestic
violence has a profound impact on the physical and
mental health of those who experience it. As well
as injuries, it is associated with an increased
risk of a range of physical and mental health problems
and is an important cause of mortality from injuries
and suicide.
Review of international literature
on risk of domestic violence shows that although
it is greatest in relationships and communities
where the use of violence in many situations is
normative, notably when witnessed in childhood,
it is substantially a product of gender inequality
and the lesser status of women compared with men
in society. Except for poverty, few social and demographic
characteristics define risk groups. Poverty increases
vulnerability through increasing relationship conflict,
reducing women's economic and educational power,
and reducing the ability of men to live in a manner
that they regard as successful. Violence is used
frequently to resolve a crisis of male identity.
Domestic violence is often associated with heavy
alcohol drinking.3 Research suggests that the different
factors have an additive effect.
Although interventions that alter
the prevalence of any of these risk factors may
alter the prevalence of domestic violence, few programmes
that seek primarily to reduce, for example, poverty
or consumption of alcohol evaluate the impact on
the prevalence of domestic violence. A notable exception
was the Grameen Bank project in Bangladesh, where
ethnographic evaluation suggested that women participating
in the microcredit programme were protected to some
extent against domestic violence by having a more
public social role.
Evidence suggests that domestic
violence can be prevented in populations in developing
countries that have not been specifically identified
as affected through life skills type programmes
that address gender issues and include relationship
skills. A review of qualitative evaluations and
experiences using the Stepping Stones, a training
package to promote sexual and reproductive health
in various communities in Africa and Asia, found
a reduction in conflict and violence in sexual relationships
to be a major impact in all communities studied.
Most interventions on domestic
violence focus on women and men who have been identified
as abused or abusing. Evaluation of initiatives
has been sorely lacking. The only review of programmes
to prevent domestic violence found 34 projects that
had been evaluated, two thirds of which were in
the criminal justice system. In many countries interventions
focus on legal redress and secondary prevention
through protection orders, shelters, counselling
services, specialised police units and courts, and
mandatory arrest laws. Although many women find
these helpful, evidence of their effectiveness in
preventing domestic violence is limited. Treatment
programmes for abusers are similarly found in many
countries but, unless compulsory, they are plagued
by very high drop out rates. Again the evidence
for their effectiveness is weak.
The two papers in this issue confirm
previous research that shows that domestic violence
is a common underlying problem in clinical practice
(pp 271, 274). Bradley et al show strong associations
with anxiety and depression.10 The papers also confirm
research findings from the United States that show
that most women welcome inquiries, but doctors and
nurses rarely ask about it. One obvious explanation
for this is that they are not trained to do so and
are uncertain what they can do. Gender and health
issues, including domestic violence, feature little
in undergraduate and postgraduate medical training
programmes and textbooks.
In many parts of the world training
programmes on domestic violence for staff in service
focus on training staff to ask direct questions
about abuse, assess safety, provide a simple supportive
message such as no woman deserves to be beaten,
and provide information on legal rights and where
to go for further support or counselling. However,
the evidence that these activities benefit women
is still limited. Research is hampered by the fact
that many programmes have failed to achieve the
desired change in clinical practice, although this
is more likely to occur if programmes are supported
by other changes in the working environment such
as having inquiry protocols, posters reminding staff,
or prompts in the case notes. Other key problems
with training have been that programmes are too
short (often one to three hours long), neglect the
personal experiences of domestic violence of the
staff that may influence their approach to the issue,
fail to provide an adequate understanding of this
complex behavioural problem, and fail to set it
in a broader gender context. Advances in effectiveness
of efforts to introduce routine inquiry into clinical
practice are needed before large scale evaluation
is possible.
Unfortunately the lack of evidence
of effectiveness of interventions may pose a barrier
to action, and Richardson et al argue that indeed
it should be. However the question of what is effectiveness
in this context has not been resolved and it is
premature to suggest that lack of evidence equates
to ineffectiveness. Bradley et al present an important
argument that inquiry about domestic violence should
be regarded as a way of "uncovering and reframing
a hidden stigma" and that inquiry is in itself
beneficial, even if no action immediately follows
from it.
The impact of domestic violence
on health has been well established and the rationale
for prioritising prevention, including addressing
it in clinical practice, is strong. A need exists
for much more research on screening outcomes, acceptability,
effectiveness, and effective interventions in changing
clinical practice. Fresh medical graduates need
to be equipped with an understanding of gender issues
in society, the impact of gender inequality on health,
and of the dynamics of the problem of domestic violence
so that they are better placed to respond to the
issue, understand the possibilities and limitations
of their role, and adjust their practice to emerging
scientific evidence. Socioeconomic inequalities
have become a mainstream part of medical teachingit
is now time for the medical establishment to embrace
the issue of gender.
Gender and Health Group,
Medical Research Council, Private Bag X385, Pretoria
000, South Africa (rjewkes@mrc.ac.za)
References
- Heise L, Ellsberg M, Gottemoeller M. Ending
violence against women. Baltimore: Center for
Communication Programs, John Hopkins School
of Public Health, 1999.
- Campbell J. Health consequences of intimate
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- Jewkes R Intimate partner violence: causation
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- Schuler SR, Hashemi SM, Riley AP, Akhter S.
Credit programmes, patriarchy and men's violence
against Women in rural Bangladesh. Soc Sci Med
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- Welbourn A. Stepping stones. Oxford: Strategies
for Hope, 1995.
- Gordon G, Welbourn A. Stepping stones and
men. Washington,DC: InterAgency Gender Working
Group, 2001.
- Chalk R, King PA. Violence in families: assessing
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DC: National Academy Press, 1998.
- National Institute of Justice and Association.
Legal interventions in family violence: research
findings and policy implications. Washington,
DC: US Department of Justice, 1998.
- Edleson JL. Intervention for men who batter:
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eds. Understanding partner violence: prevalence,
causes, consequences and solutions. Minneapolis:
National Council on Family Relations, 1995:262-273.
- Bradley F, Smith M, Long J, O'Dowd T. Reported
frequency of domestic violence: cross sectional
survey of women attending general practice.
BMJ 2002; 324: 271-274[Abstract/Free Full Text].
- Richardson J, Coid J, Petruckevitch A, Wai
SC, Moorey S, Feder G. Identifying domestic
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BMJ 2002; 324: 274-277[Abstract/Free Full Text].
- Parsons LH, Moore ML. Family violence issues
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596-599[Abstract/Free Full Text].
- Garcia-Moreno C. What is an appropriate health
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- Thompson RS, Rivara FP, Thompson DC, Barlow
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