ملخص
The aim of this study was to explore the experiences
of pregnant women disclosing Intimate Partner Violence (IPV)
and seeking help from Health Care Professionals (HCPs) at
public Hospitals in Jordan. Semi-structured interviews were
conducted with 25 pregnant women. The findings revealed that
the women were not satisfied with the care providers’ proce-
dures, responses, or follow-up. Women also preferred to discuss
IPV issues with females, experts, and same age or older HCPs.
Lack of privacy, continuity of care, time constraints, and bar-
riers for disclosing were dominant themes that emerged from
women’s contacts with HCPs. Women felt more able to dis-
close IPV if they were confident that circumstances would be
safe enough to do so. HCPs require specialized and structured
training programs in IPV screening and case management.
of pregnant women disclosing Intimate Partner Violence (IPV)
and seeking help from Health Care Professionals (HCPs) at
public Hospitals in Jordan. Semi-structured interviews were
conducted with 25 pregnant women. The findings revealed that
the women were not satisfied with the care providers’ proce-
dures, responses, or follow-up. Women also preferred to discuss
IPV issues with females, experts, and same age or older HCPs.
Lack of privacy, continuity of care, time constraints, and bar-
riers for disclosing were dominant themes that emerged from
women’s contacts with HCPs. Women felt more able to dis-
close IPV if they were confident that circumstances would be
safe enough to do so. HCPs require specialized and structured
training programs in IPV screening and case management.
اللغة الأصلية | English |
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رقم المقال | 10.1007/s10896-015-9720-z |
الصفحات (من إلى) | 807-816 |
عدد الصفحات | 9 |
دورية | Journal of Family Violence |
مستوى الصوت | 30 |
رقم الإصدار | 1 |
حالة النشر | Published - 2015 |