Emergency medical services for rape victims: detecting the cracks in service delivery.

Women's health (Hillsdale, N.J.) Pub Date : 1997-01-01
R Campbell, D Bybee
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Abstract

Rape victims have many emergency medical needs, yet there has been very little research examining whether victims are receiving desired assistance. In this study, 147 rape victim advocates were interviewed about their most recent case in which a victim has sought treatment in an emergency room (ER). The results of this study indicated that there is some inconsistency in which services victims receive and that many women did not obtain the resources they wanted. Some forms of assistance were not provided to victims due to lack of resources in their communities (e.g., follow-up medical care). Other services were not offered due to problems in the implementation of available services (e.g., the morning-after pill [ethinyl estradiol-norgestrel] to prevent pregnancy). This research also examined how characteristics of the hospitals, the assaults themselves, and the victims impacted whether women would receive desired help. These findings indicated that women who were treated in hospitals affiliated with the Catholic church; those who were raped by their friends, dating partners, or husbands; those who experienced multiple forms of forced penetration (vaginal rape and anal rape, oral rape, or rape by an object); women of Color; and victims who did not present a sympathetic demeanor in the ER were less likely to receive several forms of assistance, such as treatment of physical injuries, arranging follow-up medical care, information and treatment for sexually transmitted diseases, information on the risk of pregnancy, the morning-after pill, and information on the physical and psychological health effects of sexual assault. Victims who were taken to hospitals that had coordinated response teams (e.g., Sexual Assault Response Teams) to work with survivors were more likely to receive some forms of treatment (e.g., information on the physical and psychological health effects of sexual assault). Implications for future research and policy initiatives in women's health are discussed.

为强奸受害者提供紧急医疗服务:发现服务提供中的漏洞。
强奸受害者有许多紧急医疗需求,但很少有研究调查受害者是否得到了所需的援助。在这项研究中,对147名强奸受害者维权人士进行了采访,内容涉及他们最近的一起受害者在急诊室寻求治疗的案件。这项研究的结果表明,受害者得到的服务有一些不一致之处,许多妇女没有得到她们想要的资源。由于社区缺乏资源,没有向受害者提供某些形式的援助(例如后续医疗)。由于现有服务在实施方面存在问题(例如,预防怀孕的事后避孕药[炔雌醇-诺孕酮]),没有提供其他服务。这项研究还调查了医院、袭击本身和受害者的特点如何影响妇女是否会得到所需的帮助。这些调查结果表明,在天主教附属医院接受治疗的妇女;那些被朋友、约会对象或丈夫强奸的人;那些经历过多种形式的强迫插入(阴道强奸和肛门强奸、口腔强奸或被物体强奸)的人;有色人种女性;在急诊室没有表现出同情态度的受害者不太可能得到几种形式的援助,如治疗身体伤害、安排后续医疗护理、性传播疾病的信息和治疗、关于怀孕风险的信息、事后避孕药,以及关于性侵犯对身心健康影响的信息。被送往有协调反应小组(例如性侵犯反应小组)与幸存者一起工作的医院的受害者更有可能得到某种形式的治疗(例如,关于性侵犯对身心健康影响的信息)。讨论了对未来妇女健康研究和政策举措的影响。
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