西岸巴勒斯坦初级保健诊所家庭暴力培训和支助干预的评价:一项混合方法研究。

IF 2 Q2 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL
Nagham Joudeh, Amira Shaheen, Loraine J Bacchus, Manuela Colombini, Abdulsalam Alkaiyat, Helen Lambert, Rasha Hashlamoon, Gene Feder
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:家庭暴力是对人权的侵犯,也是损害妇女及其家庭健康的一个重大公共卫生问题。在巴勒斯坦被占领土上,29%的妇女终生遭受亲密伴侣暴力,这是最普遍的家庭暴力形式。尽管存在预防和应对家庭暴力的国家政策,但巴勒斯坦初级卫生保健系统内的执行情况很弱。我们开发、试点并评估了一项系统级干预措施,包括对卫生保健提供者的培训和对女性患者的护理途径。我们评估的目的是确定医疗应对暴力和虐待(HERA)干预的可行性和可接受性。方法:形成阶段:适应在巴勒斯坦初级卫生保健机构实施的先前(HERA)干预措施,通过利益相关者会议、与诊所管理人员和卫生保健提供者(HCP)的访谈、设施级准备情况数据和先前试点研究的结果。干预措施的培训部分由巴勒斯坦咨询中心提供,包括一次培训师培训班、两次诊所培训班和四个诊所的一线保健提供者强化培训班。干预:医疗保健提供者接受培训,询问家庭暴力,立即提供支持,并提供转介给护士病例管理员。病例管理人员之外的护理途径是将患者转诊到以初级保健为基础的心理学家或社会工作者,或转诊到诊所外部的性别暴力问题协调中心,该中心负责协调将患者转诊到适当的外部服务机构(如警察、安全屋、心理学家、社会工作者)。评价阶段:对干预后与HCP和培训人员的半结构化访谈进行专题分析;对培训会议的观察和实地记录。采用描述性统计分析了提供者干预措施(PIM)中关于HCP态度和实践变化的数据。从诊所登记处获得干预前12个月和干预后12个月披露DV的妇女的识别率和转诊率。我们发展了一种变化理论来三角测量我们的定性和定量数据。结果:培训证明是可接受的HCPs和有证据表明,积极的态度和准备参与的女性患者遭受家暴。与干预前一年相比,在干预期间,四家诊所中有三家披露家庭暴力的患者人数和转诊人数有所减少。这种减少可能是由于Covid - 19大流行对诊所优先事项的影响、缺乏时间、持续存在的对接触DV的HCP恐惧以及在诊所之间轮换HCP。结论:在巴勒斯坦初级卫生保健系统中提供HERA干预的培训部分被证明是部分可行的,并且HCP可以接受,但背景因素限制了HCP在实践中实施培训。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Evaluation of a domestic violence training and support intervention in Palestinian primary care clinics in the west bank: a mixed method study.

Background: Domestic violence (DV) is a violation of human rights and a major public health problem that damages the health of women and their families. In the occupied Palestinian territories, 29% of women have a lifetime exposure to intimate partner violence, the most prevalent form of DV. Despite the existence of national policies to prevent and respond to DV, implementation within the Palestinian primary health care system has been weak. We developed, piloted, and evaluated a system-level intervention, including training for health care providers and care pathways for women patients. The aim of our evaluation was to determine the feasibility and acceptability of the HEalthcare Responding to violence and Abuse (HERA) intervention.

Methods: Formative phase: adaptation of a previous (HERA) intervention implemented in primary health care settings in Palestine, informed by stakeholder meetings, interviews with clinic managers and health care providers (HCP), facility-level readiness data, and findings of a previous pilot study. The training component of the intervention, delivered by the Palestinian Counseling Centre, included a train-the-trainer session, two clinic-based training sessions, and reinforcement sessions for front-line healthcare providers in four clinics.

Intervention: Healthcare providers were trained to ask about DV, give immediate support, and offer a referral to a nurse case manager. The care pathway beyond the case manager was either referral to a primary-care based psychologist or social worker or to a gender-based violence focal point external to the clinic that coordinated referrals to appropriate external services (e.g. police, safe house, psychologist, social worker). Evaluation phase: Thematic analysis of post-intervention semi-structured interviews with (HCP) and trainers; observations of training sessions and field notes. Provider Intervention Measure (PIM) data on changes in HCP attitudes and practice were analysed with descriptive statistics. Identification and referral rates for women disclosing DV 12 months before and 12 months after the intervention were obtained from clinic registries. We developed a theory of change to triangulate our qualitative and quantitative data.

Results: The training proved acceptable to HCPs and there was evidence of positive change in attitudes and readiness to engage with women patients experiencing DV. Compared to the year before the intervention, there was a reduction in the number of patients disclosing DV during the intervention and of referrals in three of the four clinics. This reduction may be explained by the impact of the Covid 19 pandemic on clinic priorities, lack of time, persisting HCP fear about engaging with DV, and HCP rotation between clinics.

Conclusion: The delivery of the training component of the HERA intervention within the Palestinian primary healthcare system proved partly feasible and was acceptable to HCPs, but contextual factors limited HCP implementation of the training in practice.

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