Health and wellbeing of survivors of sexual violence and abuse attending sexual assault referral centres in England: the MESARCH mixed-methods evaluation.

Lorna J O'Doherty, Grace Carter, Emma Sleath, Katherine Brown, Sarah Brown, Eleanor Lutman-White, Louise Jackson, Jon Heron, Priya Tek Kalsi, Olufunmilola C Ladeinde, Dianne Whitfield, Rachel Caswell, Millicent Gant, Gemma Halliwell, Riya Patel, Gene Feder
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: One million people in England and Wales experience sexual violence and abuse each year, with nearly half experiencing serious sexual offences; around 30,000 survivors access sexual assault referral centres.

Objectives: This research was commissioned by National Institute for Health and Care Research to evaluate access, interventions and care pathways for survivors, especially those provided through sexual assault referral centres.

Design, setting, participants: The sexual assault referral centres care pathway was investigated through six sub-studies. There were two Cochrane Reviews (4274 participants). Seventy-two providers and 5 survivors were interviewed at eight sites; the children and young people study involved 12 participants from two sexual assault referral centres. A cohort study involving three-wave data collection over 1 year (21 sites; 2602 service users screened, 337 recruited) used a multilevel modelling framework to explore risk factors for burden of post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms at baseline and change at 1 year. We analysed costs and outcomes and conducted a narrative analysis (41 survivors). We worked closely with survivors and prioritised the safety/welfare of participants and researchers.

Results: Cochrane Reviews identified large effects from psychosocial interventions for post-traumatic stress disorder and depression. Sexual assault referral centres delivered a high-quality frontline service for survivors but groups experiencing domestic abuse and some ethnic and cultural minorities were under-represented. The qualitative research emphasised inter-agency collaboration for survivor benefit. The cohort study identified a risk 'triad' of adverse childhood experiences, poor mental health and economic deprivation, which was associated with baseline trauma burden. There were important improvements in trauma symptoms a year later. These improvements were unrelated to different sexual assault referral centre models. Costs and other outcomes were also similar across models. Harmful policing and justice practices/procedures were identified by 25% of participants. In this context, trauma-competent interviewing techniques, regular/timely updates and conveying case decisions with care signalled good practice.

Limitations: The cohort study lacked a comparison group, reducing confidence in the finding that access to sexual assault referral centres explained the reduction observed in post-traumatic stress disorder.

Conclusions and future work: Barriers to access call for concerted efforts to implement trauma-informed universal health services. The risk 'triad' underscores the value of holistic approaches to care at sexual assault referral centres and timely follow-on care. Poor mental health was the main barrier to service access beyond sexual assault referral centres. The persistence of trauma symptoms a year after accessing sexual assault referral centres signals urgent need for tackling counselling wait-lists, expanding support options and commitment to lifelong care. Multidisciplinary evaluation of sexual assault referral centres for better health provides a foundation for advancing trauma-informed practices in the context of sexual violence and abuse.

Study registration: This study is registered as ISRCTN30846825 https://doi.org/10.1186/ISRCTN30846825.

Funding: This award was funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) Health and Social Care Delivery Research programme (NIHR award ref: 16/117/04) and is published in full in Health and Social Care Delivery Research; Vol. 12, No. 35. See the NIHR Funding and Awards website for further award information.

到英格兰性侵犯转介中心就诊的性暴力和性虐待幸存者的健康和福祉:MESARCH 混合方法评估。
背景:英格兰和威尔士每年有一百万人遭受性暴力和性虐待,其中近一半人经历过严重的性犯罪;约有 30,000 名幸存者进入性侵犯转介中心:这项研究受国家健康与护理研究所委托,旨在评估幸存者,特别是通过性侵犯转介中心获得治疗的途径、干预措施和护理路径:通过六项子研究对性侵犯转介中心的护理途径进行了调查。其中包括两项 Cochrane 综述(4274 名参与者)。在八个地点对 72 名提供者和 5 名幸存者进行了访谈;儿童和青少年研究涉及两个性侵犯转介中心的 12 名参与者。一项队列研究涉及为期一年的三波数据收集(21 个地点;筛选了 2602 名服务使用者,招募了 337 名服务使用者),该研究使用多层次建模框架来探索创伤后应激障碍症状负担基线和一年变化的风险因素。我们分析了成本和结果,并进行了叙事分析(41 名幸存者)。我们与幸存者密切合作,并优先考虑参与者和研究人员的安全/福利:科克伦综述发现,心理干预对创伤后应激障碍和抑郁症有显著效果。性侵犯转介中心为幸存者提供了高质量的一线服务,但遭受家庭虐待的群体以及一些少数民族和文化群体的代表性不足。定性研究强调了机构间合作对幸存者的益处。队列研究确定了不良童年经历、不良心理健康和经济贫困的风险 "三要素",这与基线创伤负担有关。一年后,创伤症状有了明显改善。这些改善与不同的性侵犯转诊中心模式无关。不同模式的成本和其他结果也相似。25%的参与者发现了有害的警务和司法实践/程序。在这种情况下,创伤应对面谈技巧、定期/及时更新信息以及谨慎传达案件决定都是良好的做法:局限性:这项队列研究缺少一个对比组,这降低了人们对性侵犯转介中心的使用可以减少创伤后应激障碍这一结论的信心:获得服务的障碍要求我们共同努力,实施创伤知情的全民医疗服务。风险'三要素'强调了性侵犯转介中心的整体护理方法和及时后续护理的价值。心理健康状况不佳是性侵犯转介中心之外获得服务的主要障碍。在进入性侵犯转介中心一年后,创伤症状仍然存在,这表明迫切需要解决咨询等待名单问题、扩大支持选项并致力于终身护理。对性侵犯转介中心进行多学科评估以改善健康状况,为在性暴力和性虐待背景下推进创伤知情实践奠定了基础:本研究注册为 ISRCTN30846825 https://doi.org/10.1186/ISRCTN30846825.Funding:该奖项由国家健康与护理研究所(NIHR)的健康与社会护理服务研究计划(NIHR奖项编号:16/117/04)资助,全文发表于《健康与社会护理服务研究》(Health and Social Care Delivery Research)第12卷第35期。更多奖项信息,请参阅 NIHR Funding and Awards 网站。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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