Introduction
Violence against women is an important community problem in both Turkey and abroad. Recent data from the World Health Organization revealed that 37% of women in the East Mediterranean region, including Turkey, are exposed to intimate partner violence (IPV) at some point during their lives (World Health Organization, 2014). This is supported by several local studies that have suggested there is a lifetime IPV rate of 29–44% among Turkish women (Sen and Bolsoy, Reference Sen and Bolsoy2017; HUIPS, 2015).
As compared with those in neighbouring countries, women in Turkey have far better legal protections against violence. The Law to Protect Family and Prevent Violence Against Woman and Children was established in Turkey on 8 March 2012 in agreement with the Council of Europe Convention on Preventing and Combating Violence against Women and Intimate Partner Violence (the Istanbul Protocol) (The Library of Congress, 2012). The aim of this law is to protect women, children, and vulnerable family members who have been subject to violence or who are at risk of experiencing violence, and to standardize procedures and principles with regard to the procedures of preventing the violence against those people.
Accordingly, governmental personnel are required to notify competent organizations or authorities if they identify women at risk of or exposed to IPV; otherwise, they face a prison sentence of up to one year according to the Turkish Criminal Code. According to a national report on the state of IPV against women in 2014 (Hacettepe, 2015), the most frequent admission sites of IPV victims are police stations followed by health institutions. The existing national practice guidelines for IPV intervention clearly describe the responsibilities of primary care workers (PCWs) in cases of suspected or verified violence. First, physicians are expected to record a ‘code of violence’ on the national electronic health record system, which notifies the local Health Directorate. This record also must contain the findings of the examination of the victim. Thereafter, a file of ‘intimate partner violence against women’ must be created to notify the local Directorate of Family and Social Policies and the Violence Prevention and Monitoring Centre (VPMC), which works on a 24/7 basis to support the victims. These centres are state-run shelters equipped with teams that include psychologists, psychological counsellors, social workers, lawyers, and nurses that provide housing; financial aid; and psychological, professional, legal, and social guidance. Women who are in need or who were referred by PCWs can obtain housing in these institutions with their children. At last, assessing the safety of the victim is recommended in order to discuss a safety plan including calling the police immediately if any danger indicators are present.
By the beginning of 2016, the number of VPMCs had increased to 40 in the country, and 60 522 women, 5126 men, and 84 100 children have benefited from their services. However, in addition to still being numerically insufficient, shelters seem to lag behind providing protective and supportive services in the way they are supposed to, mostly due to the unawareness or lack of knowledge of the employees (Tozlu and Goksel, Reference Tozlu and Goksel2016). In Turkey, access to the data recorded by governmental institutions on violence against women is limited. Furthermore, while criminal records are available, police records on IPV are not open to public access. The Ministry of Health (2014) shared 2013 health records indicating that 13 853 women applied to medical institutions complaining of injuries caused by IPV, but the number of official complaints remains unknown. In 2014, more than 13 000 cases of IPV against women were reported to gendarmerie forces (a branch of the police that operate in rural and semirural areas) that indicated the existence of more than 14 000 victims. Cases of violence against women and the number of victims are also recorded by other police forces; however, reliable statistics are not available (Dasre et al., Reference Dasre, Greulich and Ceren2017).
PCWs in Turkey work at family health centres (FHCs), where at least one general practitioner (GP)/family physician (FP) and one assisting midwife/nurse (M/N) provide health care, with an average of four to five GPs/FPs present at the facility in total. These practices provide individually oriented primary care to the population on their lists. These PCWs are furthermore expected to assess violence victims, document findings, and provide medical care if necessary. However, despite the existence of a variety of legal arrangements in the Turkish legislation, the successful response to violence victims is dependent on providers’ knowledge, attitudes, and preparedness. Survey data from Turkish studies suggest that many health professionals lack the correct attitudes and knowledge to respond appropriately to women who have been subjected to violence (Duman et al., Reference Duman, Buyukgonenc, Gungor, Yilmazel, Topuz and Kocak2016). In addition, the implementation of legal arrangements is in some way ineffective due to a lack of resources, monitoring systems, evaluation and follow-up measures, and inadequate support sites such as shelters (Tozlu and Goksel, Reference Tozlu and Goksel2016; CEDAW, 2014).
Although health policies encourage PCWs to address IPV and many precautions are established for the detection of and response to IPV victims, many women disclosing IPV still receive poor services worldwide (Colombini et al., Reference Colombini, Mayhew and Watts2008) and PCWs often do not respond appropriately if IPV is disclosed (Taft et al., Reference Taft, Broom and Legge2004; Hegarty et al., Reference Hegarty, Gunn, O’Doherty, Taft, Chondros, Feder, Astbury and Brown2010). The most suggested reasons for this include a lack of IPV knowledge and training, a lack of time, and a lack of necessary resources (Ramsay et al., Reference Ramsay, Rutterford, Gregory, Dunne, Eldridge, Sharp and Feder2012). Women subjected to IPV trust PCWs with their disclosures of violence (Feder et al., Reference Feder, Hutson, Ramsay and Taket2006) and PCWs encounter women affected by violence frequently (Bonomi et al., Reference Bonomi, Anderson, Rivara and Thompson2009).
The present study aimed to examine the explanations of FPs and M/Ns regarding their responses to women disclosing physical, verbal, or sexual violence in a selected population in Turkey and to explore the reasons behind their actions.
Methods
We designed a cross-sectional survey with PCWs in a mid-sized town in Turkey, aiming to include all PCWs in the city centre. A list of all FHCs and PCWs located in the central district of the city was retrieved and all were visited and invited verbally by the authors. The Ethical Committee of Nonclinical Studies of the local university approved this study (24.05.2017/55517). A total of 30 FHCs with 316 PCWs consisting of 158 physicians and 158 M/Ns were approached and invited for the study, and 266 individuals ultimately participated (84.2% response rate) between June 2017 and December 2017. Thirty-six refused to participate (58.3% of them physicians, mostly due to heavy workload and/or no interest in taking part) and another 16 withdrew prior to data collection. All participants provided informed consent verbally. Recruited practices showed similar socioeconomic features between the study subjects and those who declined to participate.
Instrument
A questionnaire was prepared according to existing data in the literature through searching using keywords relating to the topics of IPV, barriers to screening violence, primary care, so on. The resulting questionnaire started with items inquiring demographic characteristics like age, sex, work experience, and family status in addition to ever having witnessed an IPV case. In the second part, we asked them to remember the last case of a disclosure of physical, verbal, or sexual violence by a female patient and their response in this case. The act of the PCWs was accepted as appropriate when the response was ‘examined the patient and documented findings as violence’ for the physicians and ‘informed the physician’ for the M/Ns, respectively, followed by ‘notified the police’. All other responses were noted as inappropriate. The following part of the questionnaire attempted to elucidate the reasons for why they did not respond appropriately and pursue an IPV case. Participants were asked to choose only one item from the prepared answer list (Table 3). A pilot study with 10 PCWs was carried out to test the clarity, applicability, and feasibility of the questionnaire.
We approached GP/FPs and M/Ns privately and explained to them that all data collected will be used anonymously. We chose a face-to-face method through writing on paper to give explanations when requested. Surveys were completed in a private room in the FHC and took approximately 10–12 min.
Statistical analysis
Descriptive statistics and Pearson chi-squared tests were used to associate demographic characteristics of physicians and M/Ns. nonparametric Mann–Whitney U tests were used to compare physicians’ and M/Ns’ responses.
Data were entered into the Statistical Package for the Social Sciences for Windows version 16.0 software program (IBM Corp., Armonk, NY, USA) for the calculation of frequencies as percentages and averages as means or medians and standard deviations (SDs) or interquartile ranges (IQRs).
Results
Two hundred sixty-six primary health care workers completed the survey. Their mean age was 42.6 (SD: 6.52) years (range: 29–56 years) and 65.8% (175) were female. Most of them were married and the majority had one to two children on average (Table 1).
In the previous year, 89.5% (238/266) of health workers had encountered one or more cases of IPV. In addition, 63.6% of FPs and 41.6% of M/Ns reported to have experienced one to three cases of IPV disclosure at their workplace, while three FPs reported more than 10 cases (Table 2).
Overall, 52.6% of all PCWs responded appropriately to a disclosure. The proportion of FPs who examined the patient, documented the findings, and informed the police was 64.3%, while 41.6% of the M/Ns informed the physician or the police. In the remaining cases, the action most commonly taken was advising the patient to apply to a judicial institution or to a VPSC; however, a small group ignored the case.
When asked for their reasons behind not reporting IPV, the majority believed that the abused women would return to her batterer; therefore, it would make no sense to file a report. A lack of knowledge in detecting, documenting, and referring IPV cases also played an important role in their responses. Fourteen percent of responders did express concerns for their own personal safety, and 12% complained of the absence of security personnel at the workplace (Table 3).
Discussion
We found that the disclosure of IPV to our population of PCWs was very high. However, our cohort seems to fail to respond appropriately with regard to the law in many cases. When encountering violence, just more than half of all PCWs responded appropriately by recording a ‘code of violence’, which initiates a referral of the victim to competent organizations or authorities.
We observed that 96% of GPs/FPs and 83% of M/Ns in our study have encountered at least one IPV case ever in their career to date. In the previous 12 months, 64% of our GP/FPs were confronted with a victim of IPV between one and three times. Researchers from the United Kingdom have reported that 71% of primary care physicians had diagnosed one or more cases of IPV in the last month in 2012 (Ramsay et al., Reference Ramsay, Rutterford, Gregory, Dunne, Eldridge, Sharp and Feder2012), while 37% of Scottish GPs stated they had encountered at least one IPV case in 2010 (Cairns et al., Reference Cairns, Mok and Welbury2005).
Prevalence rates of IPV in health care settings were reported by women who attended health care centres in Syria and Jordan as 15% and 87%, respectively, and the majority testified that the abuse was from their husbands (Maziak et al., Reference Maziak and Asfar2003; Al-Nsour et al., Reference Al-Nsour, Khawaja and Al-Kayyali2009).
Although PCWs are believed to be ideally situated to screen and respond to the disclosure of violence and abused women largely want to be screened for IPV by their primary care physicians (Black, Reference Black2011), it appears that many IPV cases are not identified and the appropriate management of abused women is low in primary care settings worldwide (Morse et al., Reference Morse, Ross, Fogarty, Mittal and Cerulli2012).
Despite the importance of the management of IPV in primary care settings, there are several barriers to delivering optimum care for IPV victims. In this study, we found that FPs recorded a ‘code of violence’ in only 64% of the IPV cases they encountered, while M/Ns informed the physician in only 41% of the IPV cases they acknowledged. A study from the United States in 2014 reported that, of physicians who screened patients for IPV, the vast majority (81.5%) did not act appropriately, such as offering a follow-up appointment or making a referral to IPV facilities (Sutherland et al., Reference Sutherland, Fontenot and Fantasia2014). In a study reviewing affirmed IPV cases, researchers found that IPV was reported by health institutes in only 31 (9.1%) cases of the 337 records reviewed (Magnussen et al., Reference Magnussen, Shoultz, Oneha, Hla, Brees-Saunders, Akamine, Talisayan and Wong2004). There is accumulating evidence in the literature that, when women do disclose violence, their health care providers often do not give them the necessary support and information (McCall-Hosenfeld et al., Reference McCall-Hosenfeld, Weisman, Perry, Hillemeier and Chuang2014; Garcia-Moreno et al., Reference García-Moreno, Hegarty, d’Oliveira, Koziol-McLain, Colombini and Feder2015).
We identified that there are barriers at multiple levels to appropriate management. Many physician-level barriers to screen women for violence have been described already in primary care, including inadequate training in the care of IPV cases, a lack of physician confidence in addressing IPV, and a lack of specialized support systems to assist PCWs in managing victims identified by screening (Gerber et al., Reference Gerber, Leiter, Hermann and Bor2005; Jaffee et al., Reference Jaffee, Epling, Grant, Ghandour and Callendar2005; Colarossi et al., Reference Colarossi, Breitbart and Betancourt2010). Researchers have examined the reasoning behind low rates of screening previously and quoted barriers including lack of time (Colarossi et al., Reference Colarossi, Breitbart and Betancourt2010), lack of knowledge regarding public resources, feelings of ineffectiveness (Elliott et al., Reference Elliott, Nerney, Jones and Friedmann2002; Colarossi et al., Reference Colarossi, Breitbart and Betancourt2010), underestimation of the consequences of IPV, and negative results in the relationship with patients (Elliott et al., Reference Elliott, Nerney, Jones and Friedmann2002).
Although the reasons for inappropriate management in IPV cases were reported to be similar, this study was designed to explore the actions of primary PCWs in the case of a disclosure, not screening practices. In this study, the majority believed that the abused women would return to their batterers and, therefore, it did not make any sense to record or report the presence of IPV. There are several aspects that may clarify this belief in Turkey.
Traditional opinions concerning family privacy, family unity, and gender roles were found to have posed problems to PCWs in the management of IPV cases. In patriarchal societies formed by religious doctrines and directed by male authorities, existing attitudes and systems endorse and reinforce male dominance, resulting in beliefs that portray women as naturally inferior or obedient to men (Sakalli-Ugurlu and Akbas; Reference Sakallı-Uğurlu and Akbas2013; Carter, Reference Carter2014). This patriarchal and traditionalist structure results in women’s dependency on men, owing to their home care tasks, lack of an income, lack of education and job skills, and lack of health insurance. Thus, women often are not given the option to consent or dissent, nor do they really have much control over their lives overall. Such a dependency is itself a main causal motive in the perpetuation of male violence against women (Gul, Reference Gul2013). Women with more financial resources and education may have greater independence in conceptualizing certain situations as unacceptable or intolerable and seeking external support (Goodman et al., Reference Goodman, Smyth, Borges and Singer2009). We were not able to inquire about the status of the women PCWs encountered, but data provide information that most of the women in Turkey are working for the family benefit and are caretakers of their children, husband, and elderly or ill family members (Dedeoglu and Ozturk, Reference Dedeoglu and Ozturk2010).
In a large study in Turkey in 2013, it was stated that husbands have higher educational levels than their wives do, and the main reasons for women not working are their status as a housewife and caretaker of children or them not being allowed to work. In the same study, 13% of the women agreed that physical violence is justified in case a woman neglects the children or argues with her husband (HUIPS, 2014a).
Noting that women in Turkey are less educated and more economically dependent upon their husbands and more likely to normalize IPV (Efe and Ayaz, Reference Efe and Ayaz2010), we surmise that they are also less able to respond effectively to IPV and may express ambivalence about leaving, which might explain the acts of our PCWs (Morse et al., Reference Morse, Ross, Fogarty, Mittal and Cerulli2012). They may consider the violence to be a common behaviour and are afraid that interference will only cause more problems for the battered women, who have no choice other than returning to their families and husbands (Duman et al., Reference Duman, Buyukgonenc, Gungor, Yilmazel, Topuz and Kocak2016; Tekkas and Betrus, Reference Tekkas and Betrus2018).
In Turkey, an inefficient justice system response is another significant systemic barrier to the reporting of IPV cases, which has also been documented in other research (Alobaty et al., Reference Alobaty, Alkandari, Alshamali, Kamel and El-Shazly2013). Police reluctance to arrest IPV committers without sufficiently evidenced physical injury, indifference, lack of empathy, and sexist approaches from justice personnel along with long and exhausting administrative stages in the legal service system led to dissatisfaction among affected women (Mor Cati, 2010; HUIPS, 2014b). Negative police and justice system responding (eg, attempts to reconcile, inadequate prosecution policies) and restraining orders or court interventions that do not help (or make things worse) results in many victims continuing to suffer silently. Moreover, despite a broad range of legal, medical, and public initiatives aiming to stop IPV, associated killings are increasing in Turkey, with accumulating cases of recurrent violence directed against the battered women after they press charges against their partners. Despite the new regulations and supportive resources available, partners or former partners killed 1703 women in 2011 in Turkey (Aydin et al., Reference Aydın, Kocagazioglu, Arda and Golge2016), and the real numbers are estimated to be higher. This may partly reflect women’s unwillingness to report abuse, but some may suggest that this also reflects their lack of faith in the authorities responding appropriately to their needs as victims of crime. Indeed, the continuing prevalence of IPV has led to a generalized understanding that IPV victims’ needs are not adequately met by health and legal services (Boyacioglu, Reference Boyacioglu2016).
A lack of critical safety measures including a negative response of the family and the justice system and lack of responsiveness of community resources for the victim before confronting a batterer may justify this high rate of inappropriate management in our study.
Personal safety concerns were the second most important reason for the participants not addressing IPV in our study. PCWs are concerned for their own safety and complain of the absence of security staff members at the workplace in general in Turkey (Usta et al., Reference Usta, Feder and Antoun2014). Sufficient security at the workplace is vital in Turkey, where assaults against PCWs, especially physicians, are growing (Smith, Reference Smith2015). It is understandable that PCWs have concerns for their own safety due to the extensive onslaught of violence against doctors in the world and there existing a lack of protective measures (Magnavita and Heponiemi, Reference Magnavita and Heponiemi2012; Algwaiz and Algahim, Reference Algwaiz and Algahim2012). Although some results from high-income countries mention that well-trained PCWs can address IPV effectively and improve outcomes (Wong et al., Reference Wong, Wester, Mol and Lagro-Janssen2006; Hegarty et al., Reference Hegarty, O’Doherty, Gunn, Pierce and Taft2008), PCWs need to know that there are appropriate and supportive public resources and responsive police and legal institutions to manage IPV before reporting.
In this study, lack of knowledge in managing an IPV case was stated as the third most important reason for not reporting IPV. Inexperience in detecting violence findings and preparing a medical record were also limitations stated by the PCWs. The need for education for PCWs in dealing with barriers to screening has been recognized in the literature frequently, citing unsatisfactory training and experience (Waalen et al., Reference Waalen, Goodwin, Spitz, Petersen and Saltzman2000; Black, Reference Black2011).
Some women may choose to disclose to a midwife or nurse about their abuse, requiring that all health care members are prepared for addressing IPV appropriately. We found that disclosures to the M/Ns in our study were lower in number than disclosures to our physicians and that the M/Ns did not report more than the half of the cases they encountered. Researchers have shown that most of the nurses working in primary health care are inadequately equipped to detect and manage violence against women (Sundborg et al., Reference Sundborg, Saleh-Stain, Wandell and Tornkvist2012).
There are some limitations to this study. First, it was restricted to the primary care setting and, thus, the results may not be generalizable to other sites. Second, its cross-sectional design based on data gathered via memory recall limits the reliability of our conclusions. Furthermore, although a pilot study was performed, our questionnaire was not further validated or standardized. Additional studies with a focus on the attitudes of PCWs regarding their actions when encountering IPV cases are necessary.
Conclusion
If protective legislations or other public resources are not available, PCWs may ignore the subject of IPV. The absence of a system of care that facilitates and supports screening and reporting IPV may add a significant risk to women’s safety in resource-poor settings and in societies characterized by higher levels of gender inequality that resemble Turkey. In addition, there are little data to decide whether mandatory reporting of IPV cases increases or decreases safety. For routine IPV inquiry to be accepted as standard medical practice, it is important to demonstrate that the health care response benefits the victims while avoiding harm. It may be necessary to identify and study other outcomes, including safety, with a particular focus on low-income and middle-income settings.
Author ORCIDs
Tamer Edirne 0000-0001-9683-5624
Acknowledgements
This research received no specific grant from any funding agency, commercial or not-for-profit sectors.
Conflicts of Interest
We declare that we have no competing interests.