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Journal Article

Citation

Decker H, Schwab ME, Wang J, Rosser ML, Petersen V, Berger M, Stein DM, Bongiovanni T. J. Surg. Res. 2021; ePub(ePub): ePub.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2021, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.jss.2021.03.064

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Intimate partner violence (IPV) commonly affects surgical patients, particularly trauma patients. However, baseline knowledge of IPV is poor among surgeons and screening is variable. We designed a project to educate surgical residents on IPV and standardize screening in all trauma patients.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: Quality improvement frameworks and the Modified Provider Survey were used to examine residents' attitudes and behaviors regarding IPV at a level one trauma center. An educational curriculum was designed with a trainee-led, multidisciplinary team to address knowledge gaps, barriers, and relevant reporting laws, and provide framing language that normalized screening.

RESULTS: Fifty-seven surgical residents (64% response rate) spanning post-graduate years 1-7 completed surveys. All respondents believed IPV was relevant to their patients, yet only 4% correctly identified the prevalence of IPV. Only 15% felt comfortable screening for IPV and 75% felt they had received inadequate training. The most common barriers to screening were insufficient knowledge of community resources and what to do if patients screened positive. Most residents grossly underestimated the incidence of IPV and 19% believe healthcare providers have a limited role in being able to help IPV victims. There were no significant differences in responses between male and female residents or among residents from different postgraduate levels.

CONCLUSIONS: Surgical residents believe IPV is relevant, but few feel they have adequate training. Residents vastly underestimated the societal prevalence of IPV and the majority never screened patients for IPV. A residency-wide curriculum can address common misperceptions and perceived barriers.


Language: en

Keywords

Education; Intimate partner violence; Trauma surgery; Quality improvement; Surgery residency

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