U.S. flag

An official website of the United States government, Department of Justice.

NCJRS Virtual Library

The Virtual Library houses over 235,000 criminal justice resources, including all known OJP works.
Click here to search the NCJRS Virtual Library

Intimate Partner Violence Identification and Response: Time for a Change in Strategy

NCJ Number
311528
Journal
Journal of General Internal Medicine Volume: 26 Dated: August 2011 Pages: 894–899
Author(s)
Karin V. Rhodes; Catherine L. Kothari; Melissa Dichter; Catherine Cerulli; James Wiley; Steve Marcus
Date Published
March 2011
Length
6 pages
Abstract

BACKGROUND
While victims of intimate partner violence (IPV) present to health care settings for a variety of complaints; rates and predictors of case identification and intervention are unknown.

OBJECTIVE
Examine emergency department (ED) case finding and response within a known population of abused women.

DESIGN
Retrospective longitudinal cohort study.

SUBJECTS
Police-involved female victims of IPV in a semi-rural Midwestern county.

MAIN MEASURES
We linked police, prosecutor, and medical record data to examine characteristics of ED identification and response from 1999–2002; bivariate analyses and logistic regression analyses accounted for the nesting of subjects’ with multiple visits.

RESULTS
IPV victims (N = 993) generated 3,426 IPV-related police incidents (mean 3.61, median 3, range 1–17) over the 4-year study period; 785 (79%) generated 4,306 ED visits (mean 7.17, median 5, range 1–87), which occurred after the date of a documented IPV assault. Only 384 (9%) ED visits occurred within a week of a police-reported IPV incident. IPV identification in the ED was associated with higher violence severity, being childless and underinsured, more police incidents (mean: 4.2 vs 3.3), and more ED visits (mean: 10.6 vs 5.5) over the 4 years. The majority of ED visits occurring after a documented IPV incident were for medical complaints (3,378, 78.4%), and 72% of this cohort were never identified as victims of abuse. IPV identification was associated with the day of a police incident, transportation by police, self-disclosure of “domestic assault,” and chart documentation of mental health and substance abuse issues. When IPV was identified, ED staff provided legally useful documentation (86%), police contact (50%), and social worker involvement (45%), but only assessed safety in 33% of the women and referred them to victim services 25% of the time.

CONCLUSION
The majority of police-identified IPV victims frequently use the ED for health care, but are unlikely to be identified or receive any intervention in that setting.

(Publisher abstract provided.)