Emerging models of care are attempting to address structural limitations (e.g., brief consultation times, coordinated service responses), re-conceptualise trauma and radically revise the treatment of women to diminish damage from stigma and paternalistic attitudes.
Promoting violence and trauma-informed care
The collective efforts of survivors of violence, researchers, and clinicians to educate health professionals and advocate for women’s safety are building the momentum needed to enact change! However, such reforms require a system-wide paradigm shift, involving significant structural and funding changes that will not happen overnight. The protracted fight to increase women’s access to appropriate and safe healthcare may lead health professionals to question how they can help women in the here and now?
It is heartening to see that higher numbers of health professionals are participating in training workshops to improve their ability to identify domestic violence and respond to women’s interlinked health and safety needs. But how can health professionals build up a culture of sensitive practice that empowers women when they remain constrained by practice limitations that are inconducive with trauma and violence-informed care?
Bringing violence and trauma-informed care into your practice
Here are 4 ways to bring a culture of sensitive practice to your work with women:
To learn more about managing domestic violence in practice go to the on-demand recording of eMHPrac Webinar 42.
You can read Victoria's research on Investigating the prevalence of intimate partner violence victimisation in women presenting to the emergency department in suicidal crisis here.
Victoria is a PhD Researcher in the School of Psychiatry, Faculty of Medicine at UNSW, currently working as a Research Officer at the Black Dog Institute. Victoria’s doctoral research examines the mental health impacts of intimate partner violence with a specific focus on women’s risk of suicide and experiences seeking support in Australian emergency departments. She adopts empirical- and data linkage methodologies to uncover the pathways between victimisation and suicidal thoughts and behaviours and generate clinically useful findings for risk stratification and suicide prevention within health settings.
At the Black Dog Institute, Victoria has coordinated evaluation studies, feasibility/acceptability trials and randomised-controlled trials (RCT) under the broad field of mental health promotion. This builds on her professional research experience contributing to empirical studies in hereditary cancer, genetic disease, and mental health settings in her roles as Study Coordinator at the Peter MacCallum Cancer Centre and Murdoch Children’s Research Institute in Melbourne.
Have you ever been on your way to work and asked yourself “I don’t really feel well . . . should I really be working clinically today” – and yet still turned up and completed a full day’s work?
*In April 2021, approximately 619,000 older Australians (aged 65 and over) were employed in the labour force", and at 66 years, I’m proud to be included in this statistic. By Tessa Moriarty
For as long as I have been in practice (and that’s a long time!) I have done my best to avoid looking after old people.