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Improving the Forensic Documentation of Injuries Through Alternate Light: A Researcher-Practitioner Partnership

NCJ Number
306265
Journal
Journal of Forensic Nursing Volume: 19 Dated: January 3, 2023 Pages: 30-401
Author(s)
Katherine N. Scafide ; Rachell A. Ekroos; R. Kevin Mallinson; Abeer Alshahrani ; Jessica Volz; Debra S. Holbrook; Matthew J. Hayat
Date Published
January 2023
Length
11 pages
Annotation

This collaboration used a theory-based approach to provide evidentiary support for adult victims of violence and a more equitable forensic nursing practices that benefits diverse patient populations.

Abstract

This researcher–practitioner collaboration uses theory-based approaches that consider both the developed program's practice context and stakeholder impact. The goal is to provide evidentiary support for adult victims of violence and a more equitable forensic nursing practice that benefits diverse patient populations. Because an alternate light source (ALS) is a practitioner-driven technology that can potentially improve the documentation of injuries among victims of interpersonal violence. evidence-based guidelines are needed to incorporate and document an ALS skin assessment into a forensic medical examination that accurately reflects the science, context of forensic nursing practice, trauma-informed responses, and potential impact on criminal justice stakeholders; therefore, this article introduces the forensic nursing community to a current translation-into-practice project focused on developing and evaluating an ALS implementation program to improve the assessment and documentation of bruises among adult patients with a history of interpersonal violence. (Published abstract provided)