scholarly journals Perceived Risk of Intimate Partner Violence Among STI Clinic Patients: Implications for Partner Notification and Patient-Delivered Partner Therapy

2017 ◽  
Vol 47 (2) ◽  
pp. 481-492 ◽  
Author(s):  
Steven A. John ◽  
Jennifer L. Walsh ◽  
Young Ik Cho ◽  
Lance S. Weinhardt
2017 ◽  
Vol 94 (2) ◽  
pp. 144-150 ◽  
Author(s):  
Catherine Mathews ◽  
Moira O Kalichman ◽  
Ria Laubscher ◽  
Cameron Hutchison ◽  
Koena Nkoko ◽  
...  

ObjectivesWe aimed to identify individual and sexual partnership characteristics associated with partner notification (PN) among people with STI. We hypothesised that PN would be less likely in more casual sexual partnerships and in partnerships with intimate partner violence (IPV).MethodsWe conducted an observational study among the first 330 patients with STI enrolled in a trial of a behavioural intervention to reduce STI incidence, at a clinic in a poor, Cape Town community. We included 195 index patients (those reporting STI symptoms), and conducted longitudinal analyses using participant-completed questionnaires on the day of diagnosis and 2 weeks later. Using partnership data for five recent sexual partners, we assessed factors associated with reported PN with logistic regressions, adjusting for repeated measurements on the same participant for each partner.ResultsThe sample included 99 males with 303 partners and 96 females with 158 partners. Males reported perpetrating IPV in 46.2% of partnerships. Females reported being IPV victims in 53.2% of partnerships. Males notified 58.1%, females 75.4% of partners during the 2 weeks following diagnosis. Type of partner was an independent correlate of PN for males and females, with the odds of PN lower in more casual partnerships. For males, reporting physical IPV perpetration in the partnership was an independent correlate of PN. For females, there was no association between IPV victimisation in a partnership and PN.ConclusionsEfforts to decrease the pool of infectious partners need to have a strong focus on the promotion of PN in casual relationships and one-night stands. IPV was not identified as a barrier to PN. In future, we need to investigate the association between IPV with an objective measure of PN success such as partner testing or treatment, or index patient reinfection.Clinical trial registrationPACTR201606001682364; Pre-results.


Author(s):  
Denise Michelle Brend

This chapter describes how an interpretive phenomenological analysis (IPA) study generated perceived risk for stakeholders and for participants. Here, perceived risk was interpreted through discourses and practices specific to intimate partner violence contexts that influenced intimate partner violence professionals' subjective experiences. These risk-responses were a fundamental threat to the purpose of the research: to contribute to meaningful change for the participants in their contexts. The clash between the research aim and the risk-responses opened a theoretical space for reflection about power and knowledge relationships in lived experience and meaning-making in IPA research. Specifically, this chapter addresses the question of whether the current epistemological stance grounding IPA research leads to meaning-making that reproduces knowledge in a form that overlooks the omnipresent influence of power and knowledge dynamics. Butler's philosophies of power, knowledge, subjectivity, and performativity are explored as means of expanding the epistemological foundation of IPA.


2006 ◽  
Vol 21 (5) ◽  
pp. 585-596 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael D. Witting ◽  
Jon P. Furuno ◽  
Jon Mark Hirshon ◽  
Scott D. Krugman ◽  
André R. S. Périssé ◽  
...  

2015 ◽  
Vol 27 (8) ◽  
pp. 656-661 ◽  
Author(s):  
Elian A Rosenfeld ◽  
John Marx ◽  
Martha A Terry ◽  
Ronald Stall ◽  
Chelsea Pallatino ◽  
...  

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