Training healthcare providers to respond to intimate partner violence against women

May 31, 2021The Cochrane database of systematic reviews

Teaching healthcare providers how to respond to violence against women by partners

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Abstract

Nineteen trials involving 1662 participants assessed the effects of intimate partner violence (IPV) training on healthcare providers' (HCPs) responses to IPV survivors.

  • IPV training may improve HCPs' attitudes towards IPV survivors, with a standardized mean difference of 0.71 based on low-certainty evidence.
  • There is uncertain evidence that IPV training could significantly enhance HCPs' self-perceived readiness to respond to IPV, with a standardized mean difference of 2.44.
  • IPV training may lead to large improvements in HCPs' knowledge of IPV, although this is based on very low-certainty evidence with a standardized mean difference of 6.56.
  • The training may have little to no impact on HCPs' referral practices for women to support agencies, based on a single very low-certainty study.
  • IPV training may improve identification of IPV at six months post-training, with a reported relative risk of 4.54 in one study, although other studies showed little effect.
  • No studies evaluated the impact of IPV training on the mental health of women survivors, and the effects on actual HCP responses remain uncertain.

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