亲密伴侣暴力。妇科医生的观点。

K Roelens
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引用次数: 0

摘要

通过对构成东弗兰德地区概率样本的孕妇进行基于问卷的监测研究,我们估计在怀孕期间和/或怀孕前一年,IPV总体上发生在十分之一的妇女中(10.1%,95% CI 7.7-13.0%),约为30分之一(3.4%,95% CI 2.1-5.4%)。我们还发现,遭受IPV的妇女很少自发地向广泛提供的卫生保健服务和提供者披露虐待,但通常同意由其全科医生或妇科医生进行常规询问。IPV的关键在于,大多数受害者不会表现出明显的虐待迹象,而是表现出各种各样的模糊和非特异性症状,如果有的话。因此,通过保健部门的筛查,似乎有机会发现患IPV的妇女。从一项基于问卷的法兰德斯妇产科医生的知识-实践和态度调查来看,妇产科医生对常规筛查政策感到不舒服。他们低估了患病率,认为在处理问题和适当转诊患者方面缺乏自我效能感,他们缺乏时间,认为向患者询问IPV是不合适的。另一方面,他们承认有必要对暴力进行培训。因此,大多数障碍应该通过适当的妇产科培训和教育,以及诸如筛查工具和正式转诊途径等有利策略来补救。根据《打击IPV国家行动计划》,包括妇科医生在内的保健工作者需要制定准则,以处理这一重要的公共卫生问题。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Intimate partner violence. The gynaecologist's perspective.

From a questionnaire-based surveillance study among pregnant women constituting a regional probability sample of East-Flanders, we estimated that IPV occurred overall with one in ten women (10.1%, 95% CI 7.7-13.0%) and with about one in 30 women (3.4%, 95% CI 2.1-5.4%) during pregnancy and/or in the year preceding pregnancy. We also revealed that women experiencing IPV rarely disclose abuse spontaneously to the widely available health care services and providers, but in general approve routine questioning by their GP or gynaecologist. The crux of IPV is that most victims will not present with overt signs of abuse, but rather with a wide variety of vague and non-specific symptoms, if any. Hence there seems to exist a window of opportunities to detect women suffering from IPV through screening in the health care sector. From a questionnaire based Knowledge-Practice and Attitude Survey among OB/GYN in Flanders, it appeared that OB/GYN feel uncomfortable with a routine screening policy. They underestimate the prevalence and perceive a lack of self-efficacy in dealing with the problem and properly referring patients, they lack time and perceive it as inappropriate to question patients about IPV. On the other hand they acknowledge that there is a need for training on violence. It therefore appears that most barriers should be remediable through proper OB/GYN training and education, together with enabling strategies such as screening tools and formal referral pathways. In concordance with the National Action Plan to combat IPV, health care workers, including gynaecologists, need to develop guidelines, in order to deal with this important public health problem.

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