WNC Family
Health Clinics Implement Intimate Partner
Violence Screening and Response
Training
This month, Mountain Area
Health Education Center (MAHEC) providers are helping patients identify goals
that support their overall health by asking questions about family planning, physical
activity, nutrition and risk factors including intimate partner violence (IPV).
According to recently published data from the
National Intimate Partner and Sexual Violence Survey, more than one in three women
have experienced violence by an intimate partner at some point in her life.
Despite IPV’s prevalence, medical providers have not typically screened for it
until now.
“We know that survivors
are 4 times more likely to seek help after talking with a healthcare
professional about abuse,” shares Jeff Heck, MD, MAHEC president and CEO. “And research shows they are 2.6 times more
likely to leave an abusive relationship. These important conversations with a provider
can literally save a life.”
Saving lives is what spurred Helpmate,
Buncombe County’s domestic violence agency, to partner with MAHEC on an IPV screening
grant from the North Carolina Coalition Against Domestic Violence and the
Office on Women’s Health at the U. S. Department of Health and Human Services.
In 2013, there were eight domestic violence
homicides in the greater Asheville area, which ranked Buncombe County second in
the state for IPV-related deaths and was on par with counties nearly four times
its size like Mecklenburg.
“Helpmate is grateful for the opportunity to
partner with MAHEC on this project,” says April Burgess-Johnson, executive director
of Helpmate. “We know that early intervention and connection with advocacy
services reduces the risk of domestic violence homicide for IPV victims.”
“Healthcare providers are uniquely positioned
to be able to ask patients about these issues in a safe and supportive
environment and then to immediately connect them with survivor services,” she
explains. “Doing so literally saves lives.”
MAHEC is one of eight implementation sites
across the state for this grant that has enabled Helpmate to provide IPV
training this summer and fall to more than 119 family healthcare providers and
staff across MAHEC’s family health centers including those at its Biltmore,
Swannanoa and Newbridge clinics that were trained last week.
“People may be hesitant to ask about intimate
partner violence because they don’t have a clear plan of what to do if they
discover someone has been abused,” explains Julie Shelton, MPH, a quality
improvement specialist and IPV trainer at MAHEC. “Helpmate’s intensive training
ensures providers know how to help their patients.”
According to Shelton, you should never
encourage someone to leave an abusive partner unless they have a safety plan
because leaving without one puts them at risk of more harm or even death.
MAHEC providers and medical staff are trained
to ask questions in a manner that protects patients and assesses their current
level of danger. The four IPV screening questions are simple but powerful and
include, “Within the last year, have you been afraid of your partner or ex-partner?”
If a patient discloses that she is or has
been in an abusive relationship within the past year, providers will encourage
her to call Helpmate during the appointment to create a safety plan. If the
patient isn’t ready to make the call, the provider or one of MAHEC’s behavioral
health professionals can help her develop a plan.
Only a few months after implementation, the
new screening program has already helped a number of women move toward safety.
“Everyone deserves a life free of fear and to be treated
with dignity and respect,” shares Dan Frayne, MD, medical director of MAHEC
Family Health Centers. “Domestic violence is a disease that affects us all, and
to stop it, we all need to stand up and be involved.”
More than 240 MAHEC patients have been
screened so far, and some patients have revealed they are in or have recently
left abusive relationships. Providers are encouraging these patients to reach
out to Helpmate to make a plan and to access counseling, resources and
emergency shelter, if needed.
Over the next year, thousands of MAHEC family
health patients will be asked about safety in their intimate relationships. And
their providers will know what to do if they need help.
If
you or someone you know is a victim of domestic violence, call the Helpmate
Crisis Hotline at 828-254-0516.
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