835 resultados para disclosure of domestic violence
Resumo:
A violência doméstica define-se como aquela que ocorre em contexto familiar, seja entre os elementos de uma mesma família, seja entre aqueles que partilham a mesma habitação. Exige uma resposta multidisciplinar no que se refere ao atendimento, ao acompanhamento, à orientação, à reinserção social e à estabilização em situação de crise das vítimas. Isto exige do Médico Dentista não só a sua responsabilidade pelo cuidado da saúde pública, como a sua responsabilidade social perante situações que identifica de abuso e violência. O objetivo deste trabalho consistiu em salientar o contributo do Médico Dentista na deteção, no diagnóstico e na sinalização de situações de violência doméstica, sistematizando os fatores de risco e os indicadores. Para o efeito, foi realizada uma pesquisa bibliográfica, onde se delimitou o intervalo de tempo a artigos, a teses de Mestrado e a outra bibliografia da especialidade publicados entre 2001 e 2015. Após se proceder a uma breve revisão sobre o conceito “violência doméstica” e identificar os seus indicadores clínicos e as lesões nas vítimas, este trabalho concentra-se na dinâmica estabelecida entre a violência doméstica e os aspetos clínicos com interesse na Medicina Dentária, particularmente nos indicadores clínicos da violência sobre crianças, jovens, homens, mulheres e idosos. Foi possível verificar que os Médicos Dentistas desempenham um papel essencial na identificação dos sinais de violência doméstica, uma vez que as principais lesões se localizam na região da cabeça e da face, sendo as escoriações e equimoses as lesões mais frequentes.
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Estudos sobre notificação da violência intrafamiliar contra crianças e adolescentes têm suscitado, entre os profissionais, diversas abordagens e perspectivas de interpretação, mostrando a complexidade e amplitude desse fenômeno, tão presente na sociedade. Nesse estudo, apoiando-se em Foucault, defende-se a seguinte tese: O ato de implementação da notificação da violência constitui-se em exercício de poder do denunciante e um ato de resistência contra a sua manutenção. Como objetivo geral do estudo, buscou-se compreender o processo de notificação de violência intrafamiliar contra crianças e adolescentes, no Município do Rio Grande/RS; e como objetivos específicos: analisar as notificações realizadas entre janeiro de 2009 e maio de 2014, em uma instituição de proteção à crianças e adolescentes de Rio Grande/RS; conhecer como os profissionais da saúde tem se fortalecido e encorajado para proceder às notificações de violência contra crianças e adolescentes no Rio Grande/RS. O estudo foi desenvolvido em duas etapas, uma quantitativa, mediante pesquisa documental em 800 prontuários de um Centro de Referência Especializada em Assistência Social (CREAS) do Rio Grande, abertos entre janeiro de 2009 e maio de 2014, enfocando variáveis sociodemográficas das vítimas, agressores e a modalidade de violência e da notificação. Constata-se que o perfil prevalente foi de crianças e adolescentes brancas, do sexo feminino, com idades entre sete e 14 anos, residentes em bairros periféricos. A maioria dos agressores é do sexo masculino, com idades entre 20 e 40 anos, e baixo nível de escolaridade. Identificou-se também a mãe como a principal responsável pelas agressões, seguida do pai e padrasto. Houve o predomínio da violência sexual, física e psicológica. A maioria das notificações encaminhadas aos órgãos de proteção foi realizada pelos familiares, desencadeada, principalmente, pela evidência de sinais fisicos. A etapa qualitativa foi realizada através de entrevista semi-estruturada com profissionais de saúde que notificaram atos de violência. Realizou-se análise textual discursiva dos dados, emergindo duas categorias: Coragem da verdade fortalecida pelo conhecimento e Coragem da verdade: conhecimento de si e cuidado de si. Os profissionais de saúde adotaram a notificação como um exercício de poder frente ao agressor e uma forma de resistência e enfrentamento da violência. No exercício da sua liberdade, procederam a notificação, que se constitui em uma ação ética, especialmente porque se consideram profissionais comprometidos com o bem-estar e proteção de seus pacientes. Foram respeitados todos os procedimentos éticos, a partir da Resolução n. 466/2012.
Resumo:
The defeat of South Vietnam in 1975 transformed Vietnamese men into fleeing refugees, boat people, and state-sponsored asylees. Writing against the popular and scholarly representations of Vietnamese refugee men as incapacitated objects of rescue, this paper provides an in-depth analysis of the intimate, insightful, and intense portrayal of Vietnamese masculinities in lê thi diem thúy’s novel, The Gangster We Are All Looking For. Focusing on the “sad and broken” father in the novel, the article conceptualizes his bouts of domestic violence neither as a private family matter nor an example of individual failing, but as a social, historical, and transnational affair that exposes the conditions—war, urban neglect, poverty—under which Vietnamese masculinity is continually produced, negotiated and transformed.
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Poster apresentado no VII Congresso Internacional da Sociedade Portuguesa de Psiquiatria e Psicologia da Justiça. Centro Hospitalar Conde de Ferreira, Porto, 26 e 27 de Novembro de 2015.
Resumo:
O presente trabalho de investigação está subordinado ao tema “A Guarda Nacional Republicana e o Apoio à Vítima de Violência Doméstica: Estudo de Caso do Comando Territorial do Porto”. Com isto, pretende-se compreender de que forma a Guarda Nacional Republicana efetiva o seu apoio às vítimas de violência doméstica. Desta forma, o método utilizado é o dedutivo, uma vez que que se procedeu a uma pesquisa geral do tema para que, posteriormente se analizasse o caso específico do distrito do Porto, conseguindo desta forma conclusões do fenómeno num sítio concreto. Por conseguinte, a investigação partiu de uma análise documental e posteriormente, a realização de entrevistas aos profissionais das instituições da Rede Nacional de Apoio à Vítima de Violência Doméstica do distrito do Porto, e de inquéritos por questionário aos militares com formação em Investigação e Apoio a Vítimas Específicas do Comando Territorial do Porto. Feito isto, assume-se que o trabalho desenvolvido tanto pela Guarda Nacional Republicana do Comando Territorial do Porto como o das Instituições que integram a Rede Nacional de Apoio às Vítimas de Violência Doméstica do distrito do Porto, tem evoluído, o que demonstra a preocupação destes em melhorar o apoio à vítima, iniciando-se pela informação completa dos direitos e recursos existentes à vítima, até ao encaminhamento destas para as instituições competentes. Denota-se porém, uma diferença no apoio prestado numa zona urbana, daquele que é prestado numa zona rural, o que evidencia que é necessário intensificar o trabalho desenvolvido na zona rural, a fim de sensibilizar a população para esta temática e, aumentar o número de instituições de apoio e encaminhamento das vítimas. Em suma, o papel da Guarda Nacional Republicana no apoio à vítima de violência doméstica passa pela segurança, proteção e suporte da mesma.
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We are pleased to present this report of our work and accomplishments on behalf of crime victims and survivors. The eight programs of the CVAD served over 225,000 Iowa crime victims over SFY11, SFY12 & SFY13. This report statistically outlines the services being provided in each of these individual programs. CVAD Staff and funded victim service providers work day in and day out to provide essential, victim-centered services to those who have been harmed by violent crime. This report aims to capture the work being performed around the State of Iowa with CVAD funds. Significant accomplishments have occurred during this reporting period, including the initial planning phases of a restructuring of domestic violence, sexual assault, shelter-based and homicide survivor programming and services; enhancements in automated victim notification and continued strides in restitution collection.
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ABSTRACT - I will explore and present the portrayal of violence in some British plays that were staged between 1951 and 1965, in order to discuss the role, impact and aim of its representation. Thus, I will consider John Whiting’s Saint’s Day (1951), Ann Jelicoe’s The Sport of my Mad Mother (1956), Arnold Wesker (Chicken Soup with Barley (1958), Harold Pinter’s Birthday Party (1958), David Rudkin’s Afore Night Come (1962) and Edward Bond’s Saved (1965). My aim is to discuss the way how theatre in the post WWII changed the traditional ways of representing violence. On one hand, violence and reality became more and more familiar and domestic, permitting a representation of multiple and non-agonic violence; and, on the other hand, the violence that was depicted often changed the way one perceived reality itself, being part of a socially engaged artistic attitude.
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Dating violence prevention programs, which originated in the United States, are beginning to be implemented elsewhere. This article presents the first adaptation of a violence prevention program for a European culture, Francophone Switzerland. A U.S. dating violence prevention program, Safe Dates (Foshee & Langwick, 1994), was reviewed in 19 youth and 4 professional focus groups. The most fundamental program concepts--"dating" and "violence"--are not the same in Switzerland and the United States. Swiss youth were not very focused on establishing monogamous romantic relationships, and there is no ready translation for "dating." Violence has not become the focus of a social movement in Switzerland to the same extent that it has in the United States, and distinctions among terms such as "dating violence" and "domestic violence" are not well known. Psychoeducational approaches are also less common in the Swiss context. As the movement to prevent violence extends worldwide, these issues need greater consideration.
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The recent strides of democracy in Latin America have been associated to conflicting outcomes. The expectation that democracy would bring about peace and prosperity have been only partly satisfied. While political violence has been by and large eradicated from the sub-continent, poverty and social injustice still prevail and hold sway. Our study argues that democracy matters for inequality through the growing strength of center left and left parties and by making political leaders in general more responsive to the underprivileged. Furthermore, although the pension reforms recently enacted in the region generated overall regressive outcomes on income distribution, democratic countries still benefit from their political past: where democratic tradition was stronger, such outcomes have been milder. Democratic tradition and the specific ideological connotations of the parties in power, on the other hand, did not play an equally crucial role in securing lower levels of political violence: during the last wave of democratizations in Latin America, domestic peace was rather an outcome of political and social concessions to those in distress. In sum, together with other factors and especially economic ones, the reason why recent democratizations have provided domestic peace in most cases, but have been unable so far to solve the problem of poverty and inequality, is that democratic traditions in the subcontinent have been relatively weak and, more specifically, that this weakness has undermined the growth of left and progressive parties, acting as an obstacle to redistribution. Such weakness, on the other hand, has not prevented the drastic reduction of domestic political violence, since what mattered in this case was a combination of symbolic or material concessions and political agreements among powerful élites and counter-élites.
Resumo:
To improve care and services to victims of interpersonal violence, a medico-legal consultation unit was set up at the Lausanne University Hospital, Switzerland in 2006. Adult victims of violence are referred to the consultation by the emergency department. Patients are received by forensic nurses for support, forensic examination and community orientation. A descriptive study of medical reports filled for the 2006 population was conducted in 2007 with the aim to explore characteristics of this specific population and to better orient prevention. Among the 422 patients in 2006, 57% were men and 43% women, with a median age of 31 years old. Violent episodes took place in a public place for 90% of male victims and at home for 70% of female victims. The perpetrators were mostly unknown to male victims (62% of all men victims) and mostly known (usually the partner or a former partner) to female victims (90% of all women victims). For 80% of the women and 47% of the men, the violent event which brought them to the consultation, was not the first one. Because 90% of all patients under study were victimized by men., not only is it necessary to target prevention program to match the potential victims, prevention messages must also focus on potential offenders, especially on young men.
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Objective To understand the trajectories that women go through from entering into to leaving relationships involving intimate partner violence (IPV), and identify the stages of the transition process. Method We utilized a constructivist paradigm based on grounded theory. We ensured that the ethical guidelines of the World Health Organization for research on domestic violence were followed. The analysis focused on narratives of 28 women survivors of IPV, obtained from in-depth interviews. Results The results showed that the trajectories experienced by women were marked by gender issues, (self) silencing, hope and suffering, which continued after the end of the IPV. Conclusion The transition process consists of four stages: entry - falls in love and becomes trapped; maintenance - silences own self, consents and remains in the relationship; decides to leave - faces the problems and struggles to be rescued; (re) balance - (re) finds herself with a new life. This (long) process was developed by wanting (and being able to have) self-determination.
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This study investigates the influence of neighbourhood socioeconomic conditions on women's likelihood of experiencing intimate partner violence (IPV) in Sao Paulo, Brazil. Data from 940 women who were interviewed as part of the WHO multi-country study on women's health and domestic violence against women, and census data for Sao Paulo City, were analyzed using multilevel regression techniques. A neighbourhood socioeconomic-level scale was created, and proxies for the socioeconomic positions of the couple were included. Other individual level variables included factors related to partner's behaviour and women's experiences and attitudes. Women's risk of IPV did not vary across neighbourhoods in Sao Paulo nor was it influenced by her individual socioeconomic characteristics. However, women in the middle range of the socioeconomic scale were significantly more likely to report having experienced violence by a partner. Partner behaviours such as excessive alcohol use, controlling behaviour and multiple sexual partnerships were important predictors of IPV. A women's likelihood of IPV also increased if either her mother had experienced IPV or if she used alcohol excessively. These findings suggest that although the characteristics of people living in deprived neighbourhoods may influence the probability that a woman will experience IPV, higher-order contextual dynamics do not seem to affect this risk. While poverty reduction will improve the lives of individuals in many ways, strategies to reduce IPV should prioritize shifting norms that reinforce certain negative male behaviours. (C) 2012 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
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This study aimed to determine if legislation on violence against women (VAW) worldwide contains key components recommended by the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO) and the United Nations (UN) to help strengthen VAW prevention and provide better integrated victim protection, support, and care. A systematic search for VAW legislation using international legal databases and other electronic sources plus data from previous research identified 124 countries/territories with some type of VAW legislation. Full legal texts were found for legislation from 104 countries/territories. Those available in English, Portuguese, and Spanish were downloaded and compiled and the selection criteria applied (use of any of the common terms related to VAW, including intimate partner violence (IPV), and reference to at least two of six sectors (education, health, judicial system, mass media, police, and social services) with regard to VAW interventions (protection, support, and care). A final sample from 80 countries/territories was selected and analyzed for the presence of key components recommended by PAHO and the UN (reference to the term "violence against women" in the title; definitions of different types of VAW; identification of women as beneficiaries; and promotion of (reference to) the participation of multiple sectors in VAW interventions). Few countries/territories specifically identified women as the beneficiaries of their VAW legislation, including those that labeled their legislation "domestic violence" law ( n = 51), of which only two explicitly mentioned women as complainants/survivors. Only 28 countries/territories defined the main forms of VAW (economic, physical, psychological, and sexual) in their VAW legislation. Most highlighted the role of the judicial system, followed by that of social services and the police. Only 28 mentioned the health sector. Despite considerable efforts worldwide to strengthen VAW legislation, most VAW laws do not incorporate the key recommended components. Significant limitations were found in the legislative content, its application, and the extent to which it provided women with integrated protection, support, and care. In developing new VAW legislation, policymakers should consider the vital role of health services.
Resumo:
Objective: This study aimed to investigate associations between violence and younger women's reproductive events using Survey 1 (1996) data of the Younger cohort of the Australian Longitudinal Study of Women's Health (ALSWH). Methods: Multinomial regression, using composite variables for both violence and reproductive events, adjusting for socioeconomic variables and weighted for rural and remote areas. Results: 23.8% of 14,784 women aged 18 to 23 years reported violence; 12.6% reported non-partner violence in the previous year; and 11.2% reported ever having had a violent relationship with a partner. Of the latter group, 43% (4.8% overall) also reported violence in the past year. Compared with women reporting no violence, women reporting partner but not recent violence (OR 2.55, 95% Cl 2.10-3.09) or partner and recent violence (OR 3.96, 95% Cl 3.18-4.93) were significantly more likely to have had one or more pregnancies. Conversely, having had a pregnancy (2,561) was associated with an 80% increase in prevalence of any violence and a 230% increase in partner violence. Among women who had a pregnancy, having had a miscarriage or termination was associated with violence. Partner and recent violence is strongly associated with having had a miscarriage, whether alone (OR = 2.85, 95% Cl 1.74-4.66), with a termination (OR = 4.60, 2.26-9.35), or with birth, miscarriage and a termination (OR 4.12, 1.89-9.00). Conclusions and implications: Violence among young women of childbearing age is a factor for which doctors should be vigilant, well-trained and supported to identify and manage effectively.