Should health professionals screen women for domestic violence? Systematic review
- PMID: 12169509
- PMCID: PMC117773
- DOI: 10.1136/bmj.325.7359.314
Should health professionals screen women for domestic violence? Systematic review
Abstract
Objective: To assess the evidence for the acceptability and effectiveness of screening women for domestic violence in healthcare settings.
Design: Systematic review of published quantitative studies. SESRCH STRATEGY: Three electronic databases (Medline, Embase, and CINAHL) were searched for articles published in the English language up to February 2001.
Included studies: Surveys that elicited the attitudes of women and health professionals on the screening of women in health settings; comparative studies conducted in healthcare settings that measured rates of identification of domestic violence in the presence and absence of screening; studies measuring outcomes of interventions for women identified in health settings who experience abuse from a male partner or ex-partner compared with abused women not receiving an intervention.
Results: 20 papers met the inclusion criteria. In four surveys, 43-85% of women respondents found screening in healthcare settings acceptable. Two surveys of health professionals' views found that two thirds of physicians and almost half of emergency department nurses were not in favour of screening. In nine studies of screening compared with no screening, most detected a greater proportion of abused women identified by healthcare professionals. Six studies of interventions used weak study designs and gave inconsistent results. Other than increased referral to outside agencies, little evidence exists for changes in important outcomes such as decreased exposure to violence. No studies measured quality of life, mental health outcomes, or potential harm to women from screening programmes.
Conclusion: Although domestic violence is a common problem with major health consequences for women, implementation of screening programmes in healthcare settings cannot be justified. Evidence of the benefit of specific interventions and lack of harm from screening is needed.
Comment in
-
Screening for domestic violence. Cultural shift is needed.BMJ. 2002 Dec 14;325(7377):1417; author reply 1417. BMJ. 2002. PMID: 12480863 Free PMC article. No abstract available.
-
Screening for domestic violence. Review is not an excuse for clinicians to ignore abuse.BMJ. 2002 Dec 14;325(7377):1417; author reply 1417. BMJ. 2002. PMID: 12484363 No abstract available.
-
Screening for domestic violence. Screening for partner violence makes a difference and saves lives.BMJ. 2002 Dec 14;325(7377):1417; author reply 1417. BMJ. 2002. PMID: 12484365 No abstract available.
-
Screening for domestic violence. Balanced approach is needed.BMJ. 2002 Dec 14;325(7377):1417; author reply 1417. BMJ. 2002. PMID: 12484366 No abstract available.
-
Screening for domestic violence. Doctor's duty of confidentiality may not be in patient's or community's interest.BMJ. 2002 Dec 14;325(7377):1417; author reply 1417. doi: 10.1136/bmj.325.7377.s201. BMJ. 2002. PMID: 12484367 No abstract available.
-
Screening for domestic violence. Routine questioning of patients attending emergency departments may help in assessing local violence.BMJ. 2002 Dec 14;325(7377):1417; author reply 1417. BMJ. 2002. PMID: 12484368 No abstract available.
References
-
- Humphreys J. Children of battered women. In: Campbell JC, Humphreys J, editors. Nursing care of survivors of family violence. St Louis: Mosby; 1993.
-
- World Health Organization. Violence against women information pack: a priority health issue. Geneva: WHO Women's Health and Development Programme; 1998.
-
- Community Practitioners' and Health Visitors' Association. Domestic violence: the role of the community nurse. London: CPHVA; 1998.
-
- Royal College of Nursing. Domestic violence: guidance for nurses. London: RCN; 2000.
Publication types
MeSH terms
LinkOut - more resources
Full Text Sources
Miscellaneous