Emergency Department Visits and Injury Hospitalizations for Female and Male Victims and Perpetrators of Intimate Partner Violence

Author:

Kothari Catherine L.1,Rohs Thomas2,Davidson Scott3,Kothari Rashmi U.4,Klein Carrie5,Koestner Amy6,DeBoer Mican7,Cox Rita3,Kutzko Kim1

Affiliation:

1. Biomedical Department, Western Michigan University Homer Stryker M.D. School of Medicine, 1000 Oakland Drive, Kalamazoo, MI 49008, USA

2. Trauma Department, Borgess Medical Center, Kalamazoo, MI 49048, USA

3. Trauma Department, Bronson Methodist Hospital, Kalamazoo, MI 49007, USA

4. Emergency Medicine Department, Borgess Medical Center, Kalamazoo, MI 49048, USA

5. Kalamazoo County Prosecuting Attorney’s Office, Kalamazoo, MI 49001, USA

6. Trauma Department, Spectrum Health Butterworth, Grand Rapids, MI 49503, USA

7. Emergency Department, Bronson Lakeview Hospital, Kalamazoo, MI 49048, USA

Abstract

Introduction. The potential for hospital-based interventions for male victims of intimate partner violence (IPV) as well as adult perpetrators of both genders has been largely unexplored despite early evidence of acute-care utilization that may be as high as female victims. The current investigation compared the emergency department (ED) and injury-related-hospitalization rates of IPV-involved individuals against standardized national norms, assessing differences by gender and victim/perpetrator-status. Methods. This cross-sectional study collected one-year ED and in-patient visit data from hospital records for individuals listed as victim or perpetrator in an IPV criminal charging request in a Midwestern county (N=2,937). Expected rates were calculated based upon age-adjusted national norms. Results. The IPV-involved population generated ED rates 4.1 times higher than expected and injury-related-hospitalization rates that were 4.0 times higher than expected. Bi-directionally-violent individuals (both victim and perpetrator in IPV charges) consistently had the highest utilization rates (ED 8.4 RR, injury-hospitalization 22.5 RR). Victims, primarily female, had higher ED-visits than perpetrators, primarily male (victims = 4.6 RR, perpetrator = 3.1 RR). Perpetrators, though, had higher injury hospitalizations (victims = 0.8RR, perpetrators = 5.5 RR). Conclusions. Substantial opportunities exist within acute-care medical settings to intervene with IPV-involved women, men, victims, and perpetrators, although the magnitude of the opportunity varied by setting, gender and victim/perpetrator-status.

Funder

Borgess Medical Center, Kalamazoo, Michigan

Publisher

Hindawi Limited

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