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. 2020 Jun 16;15(6):e0234067. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0234067

Table 1. Study and participant characteristics.

Source Country Objective Method Theories Setting Sample (Gen, #, prof, age) Years of clinical experience Training received
Allen et al., 2011 USA To compare providers and health care settings at two points in time to explore the degree to which the Health Care Council achieved proximal outcomes in the health care response to DVA Mixed methods Focus groups Grounded Theory Primary Emergency Obstetrics/gynaecology Intensive care 19 Practitioners 100% women Not stated 100%
Al-Natour et al., 2016 Jordan To describe Jordanian nurses’ roles and practices in screening for DVA. Qualitative Semi-structured interviews Phenomenology Emergency 12 Nurses 50% women 50% men Mean 7 years Not stated
Baig et al., 2012 Columbia To describe the barriers that Colombian health care personnel reported in identifying survivors of DVA and their proposed solutions to improve detection of DVA in the health care setting. Mixed methods Semi-structured interviews Naturalistic Inquiry Obstetrics/gynaecology Internal General Emergency 27 Doctors Nurses Social workers Psychologists 67% women 33% men Mean 13 years 74%
Beynon et al., 2012 Canada To identify barriers and facilitators to asking about DVA among a large, randomly selected sample of nurses and physicians in specified areas of practice where abused women are likely to present. Mixed methods Inductive content analysis Primary Emergency Public health, Obstetrics/gynaecology Maternity Retired 769 Nurses Doctors 81% women 19% men Age 20–60 years Not stated 38%
Black et al., 2010 USA To identify recommended practices of children exposed to domestic violence, as reported by practitioners. Qualitative individual and group interviews None stated Public health Emergency DVA services Mental health 22 Doctors Nurses Social workers, Managers Academic experts Youth counsellors Advocates 90% women 10% men Not stated Not stated
Chang et al., 2009 UK To explore in more depth the experiences and perspectives of different health professionals regarding what they considered to be necessary to assist them in helping women experiencing DVA. Qualitative semi-structured interviews and focus groups Grounded Theory and Triangulation Obstetrics/gynaecology Midwifery Internal 24 Doctors Nurses Medical assistants Social workers 88% women 12% men Age 27–58 Not stated Not stated
Colarossi et al., 2010 USA To expand current knowledge by comparing licensed family planning service providers
(advanced practice clinicians and social workers) and unlicensed ones (health care assistants) who work in a setting guided by an institutional policy and procedure for intimate partner violence screening.
Mixed methods, including focus groups Grounded Theory Family planning 64 Practitioners Social workers Range 5 - > 10 years 48%
Eddy et al., 2008 USA To describe one town and gown partnership established to address the health disparities of women experiencing DVA and the children who are exposed to that violence. Mixed methods Focus groups Content analysis Prenatal 23 Nurses Social workers Lay people Not stated 100%
Eustace et al, 2016 Australia To identify midwives’ experiences in relation to screening, ongoing referral and support for women who positively disclose about DVA. Qualitative semi-structured interviews Thematic analysis Midwifery 21 Midwives 95% women 5% men Not stated 100% minimal
Evanson, 2006 USA To describe the unique challenges and opportunities experienced by rural home-visiting PHNs when working with families where DVA was occurring. Qualitative semi-structured interviews Descriptive phenomenology Rural public health 7 Nurses 100% women Mean 13 years 100%
Fay-Hillier, 2016 USA To explore the experiences, views and perceptions of registered nurses working in emergency departments with regard to screening for DVA. Qualitative semi-structured interviews Phenomenology Social cognitive theory Emergency 21 Nurses 81% women 19% men Age 24–60 Not stated 19% minimal
Goff et al., 2003 USA To investigate the skills, beliefs, and expectations about screening for domestic abuse among physicians, dentists, and nurse practitioners from a border community in southwest Texas. Qualitative semi-structured interviews None stated Multiple settings 15 Doctors Dentists Nurses 40% women 60% men Not stated Not stated
Goicolea et al., 2015 Spain To develop a programme theory that seeks to explain how, why and under which circumstances a primary health care team in Spain learned to respond to DVA. Qualitative semi-structured interviews Realist evaluation Primary 17 Doctors Nurses Paediatricians Midwives Physiotherapists Social workers Not stated 16% minimal 20% advanced
Haggblom & Moller, 2006 Finland To explore in depth selected expert nurses’ experiences of the phenomenon of violence against women and the nurses’ roles as health care providers to those women. Qualitative semi-structured interviews Constructivist Grounded Theory Emergency Outpatient Mother-child Mental health 10 Nurses 100% women Mean 18 years Not stated
Henderson, 2001 Canada To determine how nurses make sense of the interface between themselves, their working environments, and their nursing actions with abused women. Qualitative focus groups and individual interviews Social Constructivist Community health Maternity Emergency Mental health 49 Nurses 98% women 2% men Range 6 months-33 years Not stated
Henriksen et al, 2017 Norway To gain an in-depth understanding of midwives’ experiences with routine enquiry for intimate partner violence during the antenatal period. Qualitative Semi-structured interviews Content analysis Midwifery 8 Midwives Range 3–30 years 40%
Hooker et al., 2015 Australia To present the findings of a mixed methods process evaluation of the MOVE cluster randomised trial. Mixed methods Semi-structured interviews Process evaluation Community maternal and child health 23 Nurses Team leaders Nurse mentors Range 1->20 100%
Hooker et al., 2012 Australia To explore the breadth of literature on domestic violence screening by nurses in maternal-child practice Literature review Scoping review Community maternal and child health 17 Papers n/a n/a
Husso et al., 2012 Finland To use frame analysis to explore the ways in which the possibilities for intervening in domestic violence are understood in health care. Qualitative Focus groups Frame analysis Public health 30 Nurses Doctors Social workers Psychologists 73% women 27% men Not stated Not stated
Inoue & Armitage, 2006 Australia To explore how nurses construct their understanding about domestic violence issues and abused women in relation to their nursing practice. Qualitative Semi-structured interviews Grounded Theory Emergency 41 Nurses Not stated Not stated
Iverson et al., 2013 USA To assess Veterans Health Administration primary care providers’ perspectives about DVA screening. Qualitative Semi-structured interviews Constructivist Grounded Theory Primary 12 Doctors Nurses 83% women 17% men Mean 15 years 8%
Jack et al., 2017 Canada To develop strategies for the identification and assessment of intimate partner violence in a nurse home visitation program. Qualitative Focus groups Semi-structured interviews Content analysis Community home visiting Mother-child Antenatal 32 Nurses Not stated Not stated
Kirst et al., 2012 Canada To scope the common elements in the literature about the “critical ingredients” of DVA referral processes in health care settings. Scoping review Realist synthesis Primary Emergency Prenatal 19 papers n/a n/a
LoGiudice, 2015 USA To glean an understanding of healthcare providers’ experience with prenatal screening for DVA. Qualitative Meta-synthesis Meta-ethnography Women’s health 8 papers n/a n/a
Mauri et al., 2017 Italy To explore midwives’ knowledge and clinical experience of domestic violence among pregnant women. Qualitative Semi-structured interviews Phenomenological-hermeneutical Midwifery 15 Midwives Range 14–35 13%
McCauley et al., 2017 UK To investigate the knowledge and perceptions of domestic violence among doctors who provide routine antenatal and postnatal care at healthcare facilities in Pakistan. Qualitative Semi-structured Thematic framework analysis Antenatal Mother-child 31 Doctors Policy-makers 87% women 13% men Range for doctors 2–10 Not stated
McGarry & Nairn, 2015 UK To explore the perceptions of emergency nursing staff about the role of a domestic abuse nurse specialist. Qualitative Semi-structured interviews Analytic Hierarchy Model Emergency 16 Nurses Assistants 94% women 6% men Range 4 months– 27 years 100%
McGarry, 2016 UK To explore the experiences of clinical staff in responding to disclosures of domestic violence and to evaluate the role of dedicated nurse specialist. Qualitative Semi-structured interviews Analytic Framework Emergency 11 Practitioners 100% women Range 6 months– 30 years 100%
Penti et al, 2017 USA To explore family medicine physicians’ experiences when interacting with patients whom they know, or suspect, to have perpetrated DVA. Semi-structured interviews Grounded Theory Primary 15 33% women 66% men Up to 10 years Not stated
Pitter, 2016 Jamaica To assess midwives’ knowledge and attitudes when encountering gender-based violence in their practice. Qualitative Participatory action research Focus group Feminist theory Midwifery 6 Midwives Age 28–46 Range 6 months-11 years 0%
Po-Yan Leung et al, 2018 Australia To explore how doctors perceived the concepts of readiness and preparedness to identify and respond to DVA against female patients. Qualitative Semi-structured interviews Thematic analysis Primary 19 Doctors 58% women 42% men Age 34–61 Mean 19.5 years 53%
Ritchie et al., 2009 New Zealand To explore the experiences of emergency nurses one year after launch of routine screening. Qualitative Single and group interviews Thematic analysis Triangulation Emergency 11 Nurses Range 1–14 years 100%
Rittmayer & Roux, 1999 USA To address the methods used by obstetricians/gynaecologists to identify/intervene with patient victims of DVA. Qualitative Semi-structured interviews Grounded Theory Women’s health 13 Obstetricians/ gynaecologists Range 20–50 Not stated
Saletti-Cuesta et al., 2018 Argentina To explore the opinions and experiences of primary care providers regarding DVA. Qualitative Meta-synthesis Thematic synthesis Primary 46 papers n/a n/a
Sormanti & Smith, 2010 USA To explore barriers to DVA screening and initial steps to address these barriers. Mixed-methods Focus groups Thematic analysis Emergency 25 Doctors 28% women 72% men Range 1–3 Not stated
Spangaro et al., 2011 Australia To understand challenges and enablers of screening and apply this to how health policies become routinised in practice. Qualitative Focus groups Normalisation Process Theory Thematic analysis Antenatal Substance abuse Mental health 59 Practitioners 90% women 10% men Not stated 81%
Sprague et al., 2013 Canada To explore barriers and facilitators to screening for DVA in an orthopaedic fracture clinic. Qualitative Focus groups Semi-structured interviews Thematic analysis Orthopaedics 22 Surgeons Residents 25% women 75% men Mean 10 years Not stated
Sugg, 1992 USA To explore primary care physicians’ experiences with DVA victims in relation to responding in primary care settings. Qualitative Semi-structured interviews Ethnography Primary 38 Doctors 37% women 63% men Age 33–58 Mean 15 years 8%
Sunborg et al., 2015 Sweden To improve the understanding or nurses’ experiences of encountering women exposed to DVA. Qualitative Semi-structured interviews Grounded Theory Primary 11 Nurses 100% women Not stated Not stated
Thi Thanh Nguyen et al., 2014 Vietnam To explore the underlying beliefs that influence nurses and doctors in screening for victims of DVA. Qualitative Semi-structured interviews Planned Behaviour Framework Content analysis Emergency Outpatient 19 Doctors Nurses 68% women 32% men Age 18–60 Not stated Not stated
Varcoe, 1997 Canada To examine the relationship between the social context of practice and the way in which nurses recognise and respond to women who have been abused. Qualitative Semi-structured interviews Fieldwork Critical ethnography Emergency 35 Nurses Other practitioners Victim-survivors Range 4–20 Not stated
Virkki et al., 2015 Finland To explore how professionals see the possibilities for domestic violence intervention and their role in the process. Qualitative Focus groups Frame analysis Emergency Mental health Maternity Social Work 30 Nurses Doctors Social workers Psychologists 73% women 27% men Not stated Not stated
Watson et al., 2017 UK To explore primary care psychological therapists’ experiences of working with mid-life and older women presenting with DVA. Qualitative Semi-structured interviews Grounded Theory Primary Mental health 16 Practitioners 100% women Range 1–20 0%
Williams et al., 2016 USA To explore methods by which DVA screening practices are implemented in clinic and emergency settings. Qualitative Semi-structured interviews Content analysis Primary Paediatrics Emergency 18 Doctors Nurses Managers Medical assistants 72% women 28% men Not stated Not stated
Wilson et al., 2016 USA To explore the experiences of health practitioners who have addressed DVA with migrant and seasonal farm working women. Qualitative Semi-structured interviews Phenomenology Migrant health 9 Practitioners 100% women Age 29–75 Not stated Not stated
Zijlstra et al., 2017 Netherlands To examine factors facilitating and constraining the identification and management of DVA in an emergency department. Qualitative Semi-structured interviews Grounded Theory Emergency 18 Doctors Nurses Receptionists 56% women 44% men Age 25–60 Mean 5.1 0%
Zink et al., 2004 USA To examine primary care providers’ awareness about DVA in older women. Qualitative None stated Primary 44 Doctors Nurses 36% women 64% men Mean 15.6 Not stated