Traumatic Brain Injury from Intimate Partner Violence: Understanding the Foundations of a Health Inequity

True prevalence of traumatic brain injuries (TBI) in the context of intimate partner violence (IPV) remains unknown given the hesitancy of women in abusive relationships to disclose abuse and to seek medical treatment unless the abuse is severe. Research estimates that 75% of women with a history of...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Schminkey, Donna
Format: Other/Unknown Material
Language:English
Published: Morressier 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.26226/morressier.5c7e3e2029d813000cb42272
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Summary:True prevalence of traumatic brain injuries (TBI) in the context of intimate partner violence (IPV) remains unknown given the hesitancy of women in abusive relationships to disclose abuse and to seek medical treatment unless the abuse is severe. Research estimates that 75% of women with a history of IPV have sustained TBI from IPV with nearly 50% women reporting receiving multiple TBI. When women do seek treatment for TBI or IPV, they must choose between a womenu2019s shelter where they will not receive medical treatment or a clinical setting where they may not feel safe from the abuser.To understand the full nature and context of a woman receiving TBI during an episode of IPV it is integral to think through levels and across sectors, including personal and social risk factors for violence and abuse and missed opportunities to access resources. While health disparities like these are becoming more widely acknowledged, the siloing of TBI and violence research and policy has obscured the reality that TBI from IPV is better understood as a health equity issue: one in which the health disparities are largely avoidable. Three concepts will be used to aid in describing TBI from IPV as a health inequity: intersectionality, syndemics, and structural violence. Intersectionality explains how the interactions between identities of race, class, ability, and gender affect individual experiences, opportunities, and social value. Structural violence is a phenomenon wherein a policy, structure, or institution prevents someone from accessing resources to meet their needs. Syndemics can be described as the ways in which two or more diseases interact in social conditions to create an excessive burden on health. These concepts are defined and explained as an equation to visualize how individual-level labels and characteristics (intersectionality) interact with sociocultural systems-level discrimination (structural violence) to lead to increased health risk and burden in communities (syndemics). Canadian First Nation and Inuit women ...