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Surgery screens for domestic violence

Posted: 21 August 2003 | Subscribe Online


A GP surgery in Yorkshire is routinely screening female patients for domestic violence after the success of a pilot study.

Nurses at the White Rose Surgery in Wakefield ask all new patients at its women's clinic whether they have been victims of, or are experiencing, domestic violence. The procedure was developed after a 12-month pilot showed that more than one in 10 patients admitted being hit by partners.

Nearly half of those who admitted being victims had a history of depression, compared with 14 per cent of non-abused women. They also visited the surgery up to three times more often than the non-abused group. The findings enabled GPs to reassess the treatment of patients, changing prescribed medication and allowed referrals to other agencies for help.
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Some factors, such as if a woman's children were on the child protection register or if a family member had been convicted of cruelty to animals, indicated the potential for domestic abuse. But Dr Ruth Roche, a GP at the surgery, said it crossed all patient groups.

"One patient was a casualty nurse who had been beaten by her social worker husband. They had experience of it in their professional lives but it had been going on in their own home for years," she said.


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