Improving the Forensic Documentation of Injuries Through Alternate Light: A Researcher-Practitioner Partnership.

IF 1 4区 医学 Q3 CRIMINOLOGY & PENOLOGY
Katherine N Scafide, Rachell A Ekroos, R Kevin Mallinson, Abeer Alshahrani, Jessica Volz, Debra S Holbrook, Matthew J Hayat
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引用次数: 1

Abstract

Abstract: An alternate light source (ALS) is a practitioner-driven technology that can potentially improve the documentation of injuries among victims of interpersonal violence. However, evidence-based guidelines are needed to incorporate and document an ALS skin assessment into a forensic medical examination that accurately reflects the science, context of forensic nursing practice, trauma-informed responses, and potential impact on criminal justice stakeholders. This article introduces the forensic nursing community to a current translation-into-practice project focused on developing and evaluating an ALS implementation program to improve the assessment and documentation of bruises among adult patients with a history of interpersonal violence. Our researcher-practitioner collaboration uses theory-based approaches that consider both the developed program's practice context and stakeholder impact. The goal is to provide evidentiary support for adult victims of violence and a more equitable forensic nursing practice that benefits diverse patient populations.

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Abstract Image

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通过交替光改进伤害的法医文件:研究人员-执业伙伴关系。
摘要:替代光源(ALS)是一种由医生驱动的技术,可以潜在地改善人际暴力受害者的伤害记录。然而,需要循证指南将ALS皮肤评估纳入并记录到法医检查中,以准确反映科学、法医护理实践背景、创伤知情反应以及对刑事司法利益攸关方的潜在影响。本文介绍了法医护理界目前的一个转化为实践的项目,重点是开发和评估ALS实施计划,以改善对有人际暴力史的成年患者的瘀伤的评估和记录。我们的研究人员-实践者合作使用基于理论的方法,考虑开发项目的实践背景和利益相关者的影响。其目标是为成年暴力受害者提供证据支持,并提供更公平的法医护理实践,使不同的患者群体受益。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.50
自引率
10.00%
发文量
120
期刊介绍: The Journal of Forensic Nursing (JFN) the official journal of the International Association of Forensic Nurses, is a groundbreaking publication that addresses health care issues that transcend health and legal systems by articulating nursing’s response to violence. The journal features empirical studies, review and theoretical articles, methodological and concept papers, and case reports that address the provision of care to victims and perpetrators of violence, trauma, and abuse. Topics include interpersonal violence (sexual assault, abuse, intimate partner violence); death investigation; legal and ethical issues; forensic mental health nursing; correctional nursing; and emergency and trauma nursing.
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