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Trauma

INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE IN ORTHOPAEDIC TRAUMA PATIENTS: A CHANCE TO INTERVENE?

The Scottish Committee for Orthopaedics and Trauma (SCOT) Meeting, Crieff, Scotland, 1 February 2019.



Abstract

International literature reports a 30% lifetime prevalence of intimate partner violence (IPV, domestic abuse). Many of those affected have little interaction with healthcare. Since a third of abused patients sustain musculoskeletal injuries, the fracture clinic has potential for identifying victims of abuse. The aim was to identify the proportion of fracture clinic patients who had suffered IPV within the past year.

A prospective questionnaire study of patients in three UK adult fracture clinics was conducted. There were no gender/age exclusions and the target sample size was 278. This study had ethics approval and the questionnaire used is validated in this population.

Of 336 respondents, 46% were females with 63% aged over 40 (212/336). The total prevalence of IPV within the preceding 12 months was 9% (29/336). The lifetime prevalence of IPV amongst respondents was 20% (68/336). 38% of patients suffering from IPV had been physically abused by their partner (11/29 vs. 7% in controls, p<0.001). None of the patients were being seen for an injury related to abuse. Two thirds of respondents thought that staff should ask routinely about IPV (64% 216/336) but only 5% had been asked about abuse (18/336).

This is the first study in the UK investigating prevalence of IPV in orthopaedics. There is a high lifetime prevalence of abuse in fracture clinic patients. Patients are willing to disclose abuse within the fracture clinic setting and are supportive of staff asking about abuse. This presents an opportunity to identify those at risk in this vulnerable population.


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