Domestic, family and sexual violence polyvictimisation and health experiences of Australian nurses, midwives and carers: A cross-sectional study.

Author:

McLindon Elizabeth Veronica-Mary1,Spiteri-Staines Anneliese1,Hegarty Kelsey1

Affiliation:

1. University of Melbourne

Abstract

Abstract Background Domestic, family and sexual violence is a prevalent health and social issue. Nurses may be exposed to higher rates of this violence in their personal lives compared to the community, but little is known about their polyvictimisation experiences or health and well-being impacts. Methods An online descriptive, cross-sectional survey of 10,674 women nurses, midwives and carer members of the Australian Nursing and Midwifery Federation (ANMF) (Victorian Branch) (response rate: 15.2% of nurses sent an invitation email/28.4% opened the email). Violence survey measures included: intimate partner violence (Composite Abuse Scale); child abuse and sexual violence (Australian Bureau of Statistics Personal Safety Survey items). Health measures included: Short Form-12; Fast Alcohol Screening Test; Patient Health Questionnaire-4; Short Screening for DSM-IV Posttraumatic Stress Disorder; well-being measures included: Connor-Davidson Resilience Scale, social support, and financial stress. Proportions were used to describe the prevalence of violence by sociodemographic characteristics and health and well-being issues; logistic regression predicted the odds of experiencing overlapping types of violence and of experiencing health and well-being outcomes. Results 5,982 participants had experienced at least one type of lifetime violence; half (50.1%) had experienced two or three types (polyvictimisation). Survivors of child abuse were three times more likely to experience both intimate partner violence and non-partner adult sexual assault. Any violence was associated with poorer health and well-being, and the proportion of affected participants increased as the types of violence they experienced increased. Violence in the last 12-months was associated with the poorest health and well-being. Conclusions Findings suggest a cumulative, temporal and injurious life course effect of domestic, family and sexual violence. The polyvictimisation experiences and health and well-being associations reported by survivor nurses underscore the need for more accessible and effective workplace interventions to prevent and mitigate psychological ill health, especially in the recent aftermath of violence.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

Reference49 articles.

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