March 17, 2020
The role of orthopaedic clinics in screening for intimate partner violence
One in six women has experienced intimate partner violence in the last twelve months.
One in fifty women seen at an orthopaedic clinic has an injury caused by intimate partner violence.
A reveals the high prevalence of intimate partner violence (IPV) patients seen in fracture clinics within Canada. The study looked at 12 centres, including Calgary, and over 3000 patients.
The findings of the study present an opportunity for orthopaedic clinics to identify and provide resources and education for both victims and perpetrators of intimate partner violence.
Breaking the cycle
McCaig Institute member, Dr. Prism Schneider, MD, PhD, and master鈥檚 student Kaitlyn Dillabough, are creating learning resources and developing screening tools for health care professionals to break the cycle of intimate partner violence.
鈥淯nfortunately, I care for a large number of patients with significant injuries due to violent relationships. My ultimate goal is injury prevention and awareness, so when victims of IPV are seen by health care professionals, we are able to identify those patients and provide help not only for them, but also to their partners to prevent further injury and even death,鈥 states Schneider.
Schneider has transformed her own practice in hopes of breaking the cycle of intimate partner violence and ending stigmatization. She is utilizing routine visits to build rapport with each patient. She asks every female patient at every appointment about their safety at home to open a dialogue, so if they are in an unhealthy relationship, she will be able to intervene and provide resources to them.
Her patients have been very responsive to the change in conversation. 鈥淲e can no longer sweep these issues under the carpet; asking about IPV should be as normal as asking for someone鈥檚 address,鈥 states an anonymous patient.
鈥淚ntimate partner violence occurs across every gender, every relationship type, and socioeconomic status. This understanding helps us adopt a new philosophy of asking every patient, in order to normalize this conversation and create a new patient experience,鈥 says Schneider.
Since transforming her own patient care routine, Schneider is starting to notice a shift at her clinic.
In the past, screening practices and suspicions of IPV were often ignored, largely due to a lack of knowledge and resources on how to help.
Don Molyneaux
MEDUCATE
鈥淚n medical school, we learn how to identify different injuries and fracture patterns that may signal abuse; however, there is little additional training on what to do or how to intervene when suspicions of IPV are present,鈥 says Schneider.
Identifying a need for awareness and IPV education, Schneider and Dillabough launched the first MEDUCATE Program for twenty-five medical students at the Cumming School of Medicine.
As a pilot program, modeled after the created by McMaster University, Schneider and Dillabough offered an evening workshop on IPV. The workshop offered students an opportunity to practice conversations with an actor portraying a patient, complete with feedback provided by their peers and a social worker. Feedback from the session was resoundingly positive with participants valuing the opportunity to become more comfortable with the issue of IPV. Students who participated will become physicians in many different areas of medicine, so Schneider and Dillabough are hopeful that they will bring awareness, knowledge, and practice to their areas of specialization.
They plan to lead another workshop this year.
Stock photo
Developing a new perpetrator screening tool
Typically, IPV screening focuses on identifying victims; however, Schneider and Dillabough are shedding light on the importance of intervention for the perpetrators of IPV in their current project: VIVIR (Validating a Tool for Use in Identifying and Assisting those in Violent Intimate Relationships).
鈥淚t is very likely that we are seeing perpetrators of IPV in clinics and it is important that health care providers have resources to screen for perpetrators in order to provide resources and break the cycle of abuse,鈥 explains Dillabough.
Past questionnaires for screening perpetrators were lengthy with many containing accusatory language. The aim of the VIVR project is to create a revised questionnaire with acceptable language for both patients and health care providers, with the goal of developing an effective and non-judgemental screening tool for orthopaedic clinics and other medical settings.
鈥淢y hope for this project and future research is to increase awareness about IPV and to create tools that provide health care professionals with resources in a multitude of settings to identify and assist not only victims, but also the perpetrators of IPV,鈥 states Dillabough.
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Kaitlyn Dillabough is a first year master鈥檚 student in the Medical Sciences program at the Cumming School of Medicine at the 草莓污视频导航. Kaitlyn has also completed a Bachelor of Science in Health Sciences from Mount Royal University.
Dr. Prism Schneider, MD, PhD, FRCSC, is an orthopaedic trauma surgeon and a clinical associate professor in the departments of Surgery and Community Health Sciences at the Cumming School of Medicine at the 草莓污视频导航. She is a member of the McCaig Institute for Bone and Joint Health and a member of the O鈥橞rien Institute for Public Health.