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Improving the response of primary care providers to rural First Nation women who experience intimate partner violence: a qualitative study

机译:改善初级护理提供者对经历亲密合作伙伴暴力的农村妇女的响应:定性研究

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Some legacies of colonialism are that Indigenous women living in Canada experience higher rates of intimate partner violence (IPV) and that violence is often more severe relative to non-Indigenous women. This results in avoidable physical, psychological, emotional, financial, sexual and spiritual harm in the lives of Indigenous women, families, and communities. Trusted primary care providers are well positioned to provide brief interventions and referrals to treatment and services, but little is known about the providers’ preparedness to support Indigenous women. Information on what enables or prevents providers to respond to Indigenous patients who experience IPV is needed in order to ensure this potential lifeline for support is realized. The purpose of this community-based participatory study was to elucidate the barriers and facilitators to care for rural Indigenous women who experience IPV from the perspectives of primary care providers and to recommend strategies to improve their preparedness. Using a Grounded Theory approach, we conducted qualitative research with 31 providers to discuss their experiences with patients affected by IPV. The results showed providers often feel a degree of unpreparedness to deal with IPV in a clinical setting. Underlying the feelings of unpreparedness were: Our recommendations to improve provider preparedness to address IPV include reducing the stigma of IPV; creating effective referral pathways; improving cultural safety within the referral network; developing services for perpetrators; engaging natural helpers in the community, and; developing policies, procedures and continuing education related to patients who experience IPV in the clinical and community setting. We suggest that increasing providers’ comfort to respond to IPV for rural and Indigenous women will ultimately lead to improved safety and health outcomes.
机译:殖民主义的一些遗产是生活在加拿大的土着妇女经历更高的亲密合作伙伴暴力(IPV)率,而这种暴力往往与非土着妇女更严重。这导致在土着妇女,家庭和社区的生活中避免的身体,心理,情感,性,性和精神危害。值得信赖的初级护理提供商能够提供简短的干预措施和威胁到治疗和服务,但对提供者的准备众所周知,以支持土着妇女。有关能够或防止提供者对经历IPV的土着患者进行响应的信息,以确保实现支持的潜在生命线。基于社区的参与性研究的目的是阐明障碍和促进者,以照顾初级护理提供者的角度,并建议改善其准备的策略的农村土着妇女。使用基础理论方法,我们对31个提供商进行了定性研究,以讨论其对受IPV影响的患者的经验。结果表明提供商常常在临床环境中处理IPV的毫无准备程度。潜在的脱助性的潜在情绪是:我们提出改善提供商准备的建议,以解决IPV包括减少IPV的耻辱;创造有效的转诊途径;提高推荐网络内的文化安全;开展肇事者的服务;在社区中吸引自然助手;制定与在临床和社区环境中遇到IPV的患者相关的政策,程序和持续教育。我们建议,增加提供商对农村和土着妇女的IPV回应的舒适度最终会导致安全和健康结果提高。

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