Pediatric care centers are a significant point of access for intimate partner violence referrals, according to data from an IPV prevention program embedded in Boston Children’s Hospital.
The pediatric hospital’s embedded Advocacy for Women and Kids in Emergencies (AWAKE) program found an increase in IPV consults and referrals during the COVID-19 pandemic, particularly for emotional abuse. Despite the shift away from in-office consultations, care was effectively delivered remotely by telehealth.
The findings highlight the importance of pediatric primary care as a point of access for IPV survivor support, the authors concluded.
”Programming for survivors (including patients, family members, and staff) of intimate partner violence is critical in the pediatric hospital setting, especially during the COVID-19 pandemic,” Rehana Rahman, MSW, and colleagues wrote in Pediatrics.
Their results align with other research demonstrating an overall increase in violence against women and girls during the pandemic – a phenomenon the World Health Organization has called the “shadow pandemic.”
The challenges of accessing care during the COVID-19 restrictions demonstrate the utility of telehealth as a modality for providing assessment, support, and referrals, the authors stated.
They pointed to certain advantages in supporting IPV survivors virtually, including the ability to speak alone with the survivor, which is often not possible during in-person visits with children in the room.
Other research has documented that health care delivery via telemedicine, especially video teleconferencing, during the pandemic can be as effective as in-office visits. In fact, care providers may be able to pick up on significant visual cues on video that go unnoticed in the immediacy of the office setting.
The study
The researchers examined COVID-19–related variations in consultations and referrals in the 11 months before the COVID-19 pandemic (April 1, 2019, to Feb. 29, 2020) and those following its emergence (April 1, 2020, to Feb. 28, 2021).
Face-to-face consults declined from 28% to 2% (P < .001) after COVID-19 emergence, while total consults increased from 240 to 295 (P < .001), primarily for emotional abuse (from 195 to 264, P = .007).
There were no significant changes in the number of consults for other reasons or in the number of reasons recorded for each consult.
Psychoeducation referrals also rose significantly from 199 to 273 (P < .001), while referrals to community resources decreased significantly from 111 to 95 (P < .001).
Primary care was the only practice setting demonstrating significant differences in the overall number of and specific reasons for consultation, as well as associated referral types before and after COVID emergence.
“We hypothesize that this increase may be attributable to the fact that, although many survivors were at home with partners who use abusive behaviors, obligatory pediatric primary care visits may have been a rare opportunity for them to leave their residence and seek support,” the investigators wrote. “Our data support the importance of a domestic violence program in pediatric hospitals and suggest that such support be available as a standard part of care.”
They further suggested that support and assessment may be effective regardless of whether that care is performed face-to-face or via telehealth.