A cross-sectional study of Australian chiropractors' and students' readiness to identify and support patients experiencing intimate partner violence

Author:

Moore Keri M.1,Amorin-Woods Deisy2,Amorin-Woods Lyndon G.3,Vindigni Dein4,Haworth Navine G.5

Affiliation:

1. Keri Moore (corresponding author) is the director of Moore Clinical Education Specialists and Researchers (PO Box 1460, Coolangatta, Queensland 4220, Australia; mooreclinicaleducation@hotmail.com)

2. Deisy Amorin-Woods is a psychotherapist and family therapist at Insight Counselling & Relationship Centre and is a seasonal academic in the School of Arts and Humanities at Edith Cowan University (6/401 Oxford St, Mount Hawthorn 6016, Australia; deisy.insightcounselling@bigpond.com)

3. Lyndon Amorin-Woods is a senior supervising clinician at the Murdoch University Chiropractic Clinic, Discipline of Psychology, Counselling, Exercise Science and Chiropractic, College of Science, Health, Engineering and Education (90 South St, Murdoch, Western Australia 6150, Australia; l.woods@murdoch.edu.au)

4. Dein Vindigni is a senior lecturer in the Chiropractic Program, School of Health and Biomedical Sciences at RMIT University (PO Box 71, Bundoora, Victoria 3083, Australia; dein.vindigni@rmit.edu.au)

5. Navine Haworth is an associate professor and the Academic Deac at the Australian Chiropractic College (83 Currie St, Adelaide, South Australia 5000, Australia; drnavine@acc.sa.edu.au)

Abstract

ABSTRACTObjectiveTo explore Australian chiropractors' and final year students' readiness to identify and support patient's experiencing intimate partner violence (IPV).MethodsThis cross-sectional study used the Chiro-PREMIS, an adaptation of the Physician Readiness to Manage Intimate Partner Violence Survey (PREMIS) to explore chiropractors' and final year students' readiness. Survey responses were analyzed through a lens of Miller's framework for developing clinical competence and chiropractic graduate competencies.ResultsOne hundred forty participants completed the online survey (n = 99 chiropractors and n = 41 students). Reports of practice over the 4 weeks prior to completing the survey showed 21% of chiropractors and 20% of students consulted with patients who had disclosed they were involved in IPV. Thirty-three percent of chiropractors and 27% of students suspected a patient was involved, but that patient did not disclose. Participants report meager training in IPV. Many are unclear about appropriate questioning techniques, documentation, referrals, identifying available resources, and legal literacy. Overall, participants do not “know” about IPV, they do not “know how” to and may not be able to “show how” or “do” when it comes to managing IPV-related clinical scenarios. Further studies are needed to confirm if chiropractors have the appropriate clinical capabilities.ConclusionWith proper preparation, chiropractors have an opportunity to make a positive contribution to this social problem. We anticipate chiropractic-specific discourse surrounding these escalating growing social concerns will highlight the intent of the chiropractic profession to make a substantial contribution to the health care of the Australian public. More studies are needed.

Publisher

Brighthall

Subject

Chiropractics

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