Identifying and responding to domestic abuse in cancer care: A mixed methods service evaluation of a training and support intervention.

IF 2.7 3区 医学 Q1 NURSING European Journal of Oncology Nursing Pub Date : 2024-10-28 DOI:10.1016/j.ejon.2024.102724
Sandi Dheensa, Ruth Hendy, Linda Finn, Marion Goodchild, Estela Capelas Barbosa
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Abstract

Purpose: This article reports on a service evaluation of a domestic abuse intervention for hospital-based cancer professionals in two sites. The core component was a training and monitoring process, which hospital-based domestic abuse coordinators led. This role was adapted from a generic hospital role to be cancer specific. Pre-training preparedness to identify and respond to domestic abuse, domestic abuse identifications, and changes ∼6 months post-training are presented.

Methods: We used an explanatory sequential design including a survey pre-training (Time 1), immediately post-training (Time 2) (with follow-up semi-structured interviews) and ∼6 months post-training (Time 3). Sites were asked to share domestic abuse identification numbers pre- and post-coordinator hire.

Results: Coordinators trained 1080 staff (17% of staff across two sites). Survey 1 (Time 1 & 2) response rate was 44.9% (n = 485) and survey 2 8.8% (n = 95) (Time 3). All confidence scores significantly increased from pre- (Time 1) to post-training (Time 2). Time 3 also saw significant gains. There were also highly significant decreases in the perception of most barriers to asking about and responding to domestic abuse post-training. We were unable to determine Site 2's identification rate but Site 1's increased. Qualitative findings shed light on key moderators between intervention components and outcomes, and additional components needed to change practice.

Conclusion: Our evaluation contributes further evidence of the benefit of hospital-based domestic abuse coordinator roles; contributes new evidence for the feasibility of adapting the role for a specific context; and illustrates the need for a domestic abuse response in the cancer setting.

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识别和应对癌症护理中的家庭虐待:培训和支持干预的混合方法服务评估。
目的:本文报告了两个地点对医院癌症专业人员家庭虐待干预的服务评估。核心组成部分是由医院家庭虐待协调员领导的培训和监测进程。这个角色从一个普通的医院角色改编为癌症特异性角色。介绍了识别和应对家庭虐待的培训前准备、家庭虐待识别和培训后约6个月的变化。方法:我们采用了解释性序列设计,包括培训前(时间1)、培训后(时间2)(随访半结构化访谈)和培训后6个月(时间3)的调查。要求网站分享协调员招聘前和招聘后的家庭暴力识别号码。结果:协调员培训了1080名员工(占两个站点员工的17%)。调查1(时间1和时间2)的回复率为44.9% (n = 485),调查2 (n = 95)(时间3)的回复率为8.8% (n = 95)。从训练前(时间1)到训练后(时间2),所有的信心得分都显著增加。培训后对询问和应对家庭暴力的大多数障碍的看法也显著减少。我们无法确定Site 2的识别率,但Site 1的识别率增加了。定性研究结果揭示了干预成分和结果之间的关键调节因素,以及改变实践所需的其他成分。结论:我们的评估进一步证明了医院家庭暴力协调员角色的好处;为使该角色适应特定环境的可行性提供新的证据;这也说明了在癌症环境下应对家庭暴力的必要性。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.40
自引率
3.60%
发文量
109
审稿时长
57 days
期刊介绍: The European Journal of Oncology Nursing is an international journal which publishes research of direct relevance to patient care, nurse education, management and policy development. EJON is proud to be the official journal of the European Oncology Nursing Society. The journal publishes the following types of papers: • Original research articles • Review articles
期刊最新文献
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