Objective: To identify demographic and health indicators
of domestic violence.
Design: Anonymous questionnaire survey of patients regarding
violence and a chart review regarding symptoms
and diagnoses.
Setting: Community-based family practice residency training
center in a midwestern city.
Participants: Women 18 years of age or older visiting
the center over a 2-month period in 1990. Of 476
eligible participants, 394 (82.7%) consented to complete
the survey.
Measures: A detailed, standardized measure of violence
was used. Physical and psychological problems
were given codes from the International Classification of
Diseases, Ninth Revision (ICD-9).
Results: Younger women and those separated or divorced
from their partners were more likely to have been victims.
Never-married women also had substantially high rates of
victimization. Depression was the strongest indicator of victimization,
even when controlling for demographic factors.
Back pain, ulcers, headaches, and anxiety were not strong
indicators of abuse. A classification analysis showed that
a combination of all variables could predict lifetime injury
only about half the time and violence in the past year only
about 20% of the time.
Conclusions: Since neither demographic nor health factors
could accurately predict who had been victimized, all
women need to be asked about abuse. Physicians should
also keep in mind that divorced and unmarried women are
often affected by abuse, either immediately or by its long
term aftereffects.Peer Reviewedhttp://deepblue.lib.umich.edu/bitstream/2027.42/89971/1/Saunders-Hamberger-Hovey-1993-Indicators of woman abuse based on a chart review at a family practice center AFM-AMA.pd