在澳大利亚预防亲密伴侣暴力:释放全科做法的初级预防潜力。

IF 6.7 2区 医学 Q1 MEDICINE, GENERAL & INTERNAL
Georgina Sutherland, Karen Block
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引用次数: 0

摘要

对妇女的暴力行为是一个有害的全球公共卫生和人权问题。这也是可以预防的。以证据为基础的暴力预防政策和做法的关键条件之一是强有力和可靠的数据,以确定谁遭受暴力,实施暴力的类型和模式,并深入了解暴力发生的背景和环境。虽然没有一个单一的数据源可以提供所有的答案,但在本期的MJA中,Mathews和他的同事们为这个数据难题提供了一个关键的部分。从他们大规模的、具有全国代表性的调查中得出的患病率估计证实了我们对澳大利亚亲密伴侣暴力的了解:这是普遍和频繁的;风险的决定因素是复杂和多方面的;它对妇女和不同性别的人的影响尤为严重。重要的是,这些发现增加了以前基于人口的亲密伴侣暴力数据的细微差别,例如澳大利亚统计局个人安全调查。2这包括对身体,性和心理暴力的广泛类别中特定形式暴力的性质和程度的更深入的见解,它们的多态结构,以及它是如何在所有类型的亲密关系中实施的。Mathews和他的同事们特别注意到,越来越多的证据表明,在青少年和年轻人,尤其是年轻女性的亲密关系中,暴力行为尤为突出。3,4作者报告说,48.4%的16-24岁的参与者在亲密关系中经历过暴力。与同龄青年男子相比,青年妇女遭受所有类型的暴力,包括多种不同形式的暴力的频率更高。他们的发现促使Mathews和同事们与其他研究人员、政策制定者和倡导者一起敲响警钟,尽管几十年来一直在研究、政策和实践方面受到关注,但亲密伴侣对女性,尤其是年轻女性的暴力行为仍然普遍存在这可能反映了年轻人更愿意揭露暴力行为,以及对早期亲密关系和约会关系中的暴力和虐待行为的构成有了更高的认识。但总的来说,这些发现让人们停下来思考,如何更好地制定国家政策和预防战略,以在这个关键的发展阶段接触和影响年轻人。正如Mathews及其同事所强调的,卫生系统和临床护理是有效初级预防亲密伴侣暴力和早期干预的关键环境。然而,首先,我们需要对什么是预防有一个共同的理解。初级预防必须解决性别社会规范、权力不平衡以及推动暴力和为暴力辩护的做法虽然筛查乳腺癌等疾病对于发现和预防疾病进展至关重要,但这是早期干预的一个例子。除非针对其根本原因和风险因素采取行动,否则筛查不会降低其流行率,而卫生从业人员在这方面发挥着重要作用。暴力问题也是如此,但澳大利亚保健服务的初级预防干预措施,特别是在一般做法方面,发展缓慢。大多数关于消除对妇女的暴力行为的国家和州一级政策,包括《2022-2032年终止对妇女和儿童的暴力行为国家计划》,都将初级保健列为解决方案的重要组成部分。作为进入卫生系统的共同切入点,全科医生在早期干预和应对暴力方面承担了大量繁重的工作事实上,在一般实践中筛查暴力、应对暴力以及将遭受暴力的人转介到支持和康复服务机构都非常重要。但这些行动都不构成初级预防;他们的目的不是首先防止暴力发生。尽管澳大利亚政府最近审查了预防方法,优先考虑应对措施,将其作为释放澳大利亚预防潜力的关键,但对二级和三级预防战略的投资不平衡,如果没有对初级预防的充分和持续投资,将无法实现消除对妇女暴力的根本目标。我们同意Mathews及其同事的看法,即解决亲密伴侣暴力等复杂的公共卫生问题需要大规模的努力,让最广泛的部门和环境中的社区参与进来。全科实践面临的挑战是确定如何成为这一多部门努力的有效和有意义的一部分。受陈规定型观念影响的有害的性别和社会规范始于幼儿期,据报道,青春期早期是性别不平等加速的关键时期。 10,11全科医疗具有独特的优势,可以在生命历程的多个阶段进行干预,并将重点放在改变与性别有关的规范上,这些规范是暴力的基础。无相关披露。没有外部同行评审。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Preventing intimate partner violence in Australia: unlocking the primary prevention potential of general practice

Violence against women is a pernicious global public health and human rights problem. It is also preventable. One of the key requisites for evidence-based violence prevention policy and practice is robust and reliable data that identify who experiences violence, the types and patterns of violence perpetrated, and insights into the context and settings in which violence occurs. While no single data source can provide all the answers, in this issue of the MJA, Mathews and colleagues1 contribute a crucial piece to the data puzzle.

Prevalence estimates from their large, nationally representative survey confirm what we know about intimate partner violence in Australia: it is pervasive and frequent; the determinants of risk are complex and multifaceted; it disproportionately affects women and people of diverse genders. Importantly, these findings add nuance to what can be gleaned from previous population-based data on intimate partner violence, such as the Australian Bureau of Statistics Personal Safety Survey.2 This includes deeper insights into the nature and extent of specific forms of violence included in the broad categories of physical, sexual, and psychological violence, their polymorphic structure, and how it is perpetrated across all types of intimate relationships.

In particular, Mathews and colleagues draw attention to the growing, and concerning, body of evidence about the prominence of violence in the intimate relationships of adolescents and young people, especially young women.3, 4 The authors report that 48.4% of participants aged 16–24 years have experienced violence in an intimate relationship. For young women, experiences of all types of violence, including multiple, distinct forms of violence was more frequent than for young men of the same age.1

Their findings prompt Mathews and colleagues to join other researchers, policymakers, and advocates in sounding the alarm that intimate partner violence against women, especially young women, remains widespread, despite decades of research, policy, and practice attention.5 It is possible that increasing prevalence reflects a greater willingness among young people to disclose violence, and greater awareness of what constitutes violent and abusive behaviour in early intimate and dating relationships. But overall, the findings give pause for thought about how national policy and prevention strategies can be better tailored to reach and influence young people during this critical developmental stage.

As highlighted by Mathews and colleagues, health systems and clinical care are key settings for effective primary prevention of intimate partner violence and early intervention. First, however, we need a shared understanding of what is meant by prevention. Primary prevention must address gendered social norms, power imbalances and practices that drive and justify violence.6 While screening for diseases such as breast cancer is vital for detecting and preventing disease progression, it is an example of early intervention. Screening will not reduce its prevalence unless action is also taken against its root causes and risk factors, and health practitioners play an important role here. The same holds true for violence, but primary prevention interventions in Australian health services, particularly in general practice, have been slow to develop.

Most national and state-based policies on eliminating violence against women, including the National Plan to End Violence Against Women and Children 2022–2032,7 nominate primary care as an important part of the solution. As a common entry point into the health system, general practitioners do much of the heavy lifting in early intervention and response to violence.8 Indeed, screening for violence in general practice, responding to violence, and referring people experiencing violence to support and recovery services are all immensely important. But none of these actions constitutes primary prevention; their purpose is not to prevent violence from happening in the first place. Despite the recent Australian government review of prevention approaches prioritising response measures as the key to unlocking Australia's prevention potential,9 imbalanced investment in secondary and tertiary prevention strategies, without adequate and sustained investment in primary prevention, will not achieve the fundamental aim of ending violence against women.

We concur with Mathews and colleagues that solving a complex public health problem such as intimate partner violence requires a large scale effort, engaging communities across the broadest range of sectors and settings. The challenge for general practice is identifying how to be an effective and meaningful part of this multisectoral effort. Harmful gender and social norms, shaped by stereotypes, begin in early childhood, and it has been reported that early adolescence is the critical period during which gender inequalities accelerate.10, 11 General practice is uniquely positioned to intervene at multiple points across the life course, and to sharpen its focus on shifting gender-related norms that underpin violence.

No relevant disclosures.

Commissioned; not externally peer reviewed.

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来源期刊
Medical Journal of Australia
Medical Journal of Australia 医学-医学:内科
CiteScore
9.40
自引率
5.30%
发文量
410
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: The Medical Journal of Australia (MJA) stands as Australia's foremost general medical journal, leading the dissemination of high-quality research and commentary to shape health policy and influence medical practices within the country. Under the leadership of Professor Virginia Barbour, the expert editorial team at MJA is dedicated to providing authors with a constructive and collaborative peer-review and publication process. Established in 1914, the MJA has evolved into a modern journal that upholds its founding values, maintaining a commitment to supporting the medical profession by delivering high-quality and pertinent information essential to medical practice.
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