Health system preparedness to respond to domestic and sexualized violence: A cross-sectional survey in Nova Scotia, Canada

Objective: Violence against women (VAW) has detrimental health consequences, making the health system an important intervention point. There are no large-scale Canadian studies on health system preparedness or practices related to VAW using data collected in the last 20 years. We investigated health...

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Main Authors: Alexa R. Yakubovich, Bridget Steele, Jessie Cullum, Christine P. Johnson, Lindsey N. Parker, Susan J. Wilson, Robert Green, Shelley Fashan, Stacy Burgess, Annette Elliott Rose
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2025-05-01
Series:Preventive Medicine Reports
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Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S221133552500097X
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author Alexa R. Yakubovich
Bridget Steele
Jessie Cullum
Christine P. Johnson
Lindsey N. Parker
Susan J. Wilson
Robert Green
Shelley Fashan
Stacy Burgess
Annette Elliott Rose
author_facet Alexa R. Yakubovich
Bridget Steele
Jessie Cullum
Christine P. Johnson
Lindsey N. Parker
Susan J. Wilson
Robert Green
Shelley Fashan
Stacy Burgess
Annette Elliott Rose
author_sort Alexa R. Yakubovich
collection DOAJ
description Objective: Violence against women (VAW) has detrimental health consequences, making the health system an important intervention point. There are no large-scale Canadian studies on health system preparedness or practices related to VAW using data collected in the last 20 years. We investigated health professionals' knowledge and practices around VAW in Nova Scotia, which has the highest self-reported prevalence of intimate partner violence against women of all Canadian provinces.Methods: We surveyed 1649 participants working in health services and policy in Nova Scotia in partnership with knowledge users across the VAW and health sectors. We descriptively analyzed quantitative data on knowledge and practices related to domestic and sexualized violence (the most common forms of VAW).Results: Over 90 % of participants worked in areas of high priority to addressing VAW (e.g., mental health and addictions), yet only 35 % reported that addressing domestic or sexualized violence was part of their team's goals. Nearly half the sample (43 %) reported seeing at least one new case of abuse in their work in the last six months, two-thirds of whom had not received training on domestic or sexualized violence since March 2020. Participants reported significant deficits in VAW-related knowledge and systems-level supports, including inadequate referral resources, time, and space to respond to violence among patients.Conclusions: We found significant gaps in current health system capacity to respond to VAW in one of Canada's most impacted provinces, despite increased awareness and programming around VAW since March 2020. Given the health inequities faced by survivors, health sectors must be better equipped to respond to VAW.
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spelling doaj-art-ff1b317a1acf40d6813d57b10c1cbf1b2025-08-20T02:11:37ZengElsevierPreventive Medicine Reports2211-33552025-05-015310305810.1016/j.pmedr.2025.103058Health system preparedness to respond to domestic and sexualized violence: A cross-sectional survey in Nova Scotia, CanadaAlexa R. Yakubovich0Bridget Steele1Jessie Cullum2Christine P. Johnson3Lindsey N. Parker4Susan J. Wilson5Robert Green6Shelley Fashan7Stacy Burgess8Annette Elliott Rose9Dalhousie University, Canada; Nova Scotia Health, Canada; Corresponding author at: Department of Community Health and Epidemiology, 5790 University Avenue, Halifax, NS, B3H 1V7, Canada.Dalhousie University, Canada; University of Oxford, UKDalhousie University, CanadaNova Scotia Health, CanadaOffice of Addictions and Mental Health, Canada; IWK Health, CanadaNova Scotia Health, CanadaDalhousie University, Canada; Nova Scotia Health, CanadaHealth Association of African Canadians, CanadaIWK Health, Canada; Department of Health and Wellness, CanadaNova Scotia Health, Canada; IWK Health, CanadaObjective: Violence against women (VAW) has detrimental health consequences, making the health system an important intervention point. There are no large-scale Canadian studies on health system preparedness or practices related to VAW using data collected in the last 20 years. We investigated health professionals' knowledge and practices around VAW in Nova Scotia, which has the highest self-reported prevalence of intimate partner violence against women of all Canadian provinces.Methods: We surveyed 1649 participants working in health services and policy in Nova Scotia in partnership with knowledge users across the VAW and health sectors. We descriptively analyzed quantitative data on knowledge and practices related to domestic and sexualized violence (the most common forms of VAW).Results: Over 90 % of participants worked in areas of high priority to addressing VAW (e.g., mental health and addictions), yet only 35 % reported that addressing domestic or sexualized violence was part of their team's goals. Nearly half the sample (43 %) reported seeing at least one new case of abuse in their work in the last six months, two-thirds of whom had not received training on domestic or sexualized violence since March 2020. Participants reported significant deficits in VAW-related knowledge and systems-level supports, including inadequate referral resources, time, and space to respond to violence among patients.Conclusions: We found significant gaps in current health system capacity to respond to VAW in one of Canada's most impacted provinces, despite increased awareness and programming around VAW since March 2020. Given the health inequities faced by survivors, health sectors must be better equipped to respond to VAW.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S221133552500097XDomestic violenceHealth servicesHealth policyWomen's healthNova Scotia
spellingShingle Alexa R. Yakubovich
Bridget Steele
Jessie Cullum
Christine P. Johnson
Lindsey N. Parker
Susan J. Wilson
Robert Green
Shelley Fashan
Stacy Burgess
Annette Elliott Rose
Health system preparedness to respond to domestic and sexualized violence: A cross-sectional survey in Nova Scotia, Canada
Preventive Medicine Reports
Domestic violence
Health services
Health policy
Women's health
Nova Scotia
title Health system preparedness to respond to domestic and sexualized violence: A cross-sectional survey in Nova Scotia, Canada
title_full Health system preparedness to respond to domestic and sexualized violence: A cross-sectional survey in Nova Scotia, Canada
title_fullStr Health system preparedness to respond to domestic and sexualized violence: A cross-sectional survey in Nova Scotia, Canada
title_full_unstemmed Health system preparedness to respond to domestic and sexualized violence: A cross-sectional survey in Nova Scotia, Canada
title_short Health system preparedness to respond to domestic and sexualized violence: A cross-sectional survey in Nova Scotia, Canada
title_sort health system preparedness to respond to domestic and sexualized violence a cross sectional survey in nova scotia canada
topic Domestic violence
Health services
Health policy
Women's health
Nova Scotia
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S221133552500097X
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