“I Can Remember Thinking, Like Almost Wishing, That the Injuries Would Have Been Worse, Because Then I Wouldn’t Be Questioned”: A Qualitative Study on Women’s Experience of Accessing Healthcare for Intimate Partner Violence-Related Brain Injury
Eve M. Valera, Isha Sanghvi, Sarah Rose Sitto, Jason Chua, Altaf Saadi, Alice Theadom

TL;DR
This study explores how women experience seeking healthcare for brain injuries caused by intimate partner violence, highlighting the challenges they face.
Contribution
The study provides new qualitative insights into the barriers and facilitators for women accessing healthcare for IPV-related brain injuries.
Findings
Two main themes were identified: deciding to seek healthcare and the complexity of identifying IPV-related BI.
Fear, shame, and previous negative interactions significantly hinder women from seeking proper treatment.
Training for healthcare professionals on IPV could improve women's willingness to disclose and seek help.
Abstract
Background/Objectives: To identify the barriers and facilitators to accessing healthcare following intimate partner violence (IPV)-related brain injury (BI). Methods: Sixteen adult women participated in interviews about their experience of accessing healthcare following IPV-related BI. Interviews were transcribed verbatim and analyzed using the interpretative descriptive (ID) approach to identify themes and subthemes in the data. Results: Two themes, each with six subthemes related to healthcare seeking for IPV-related BI were identified: Theme 1—Deciding to seek and ability to access healthcare, comprising (a) severity of injury; (b) impact of injury; (c) ability to access medical services; (d) self-blame, fear, shame, and guilt; (e) contextual influences on healthcare seeking; and (f) previous negative interactions; and Theme 2—Complexity in identifying IPV-related BI, comprising (a)…
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Taxonomy
TopicsIntimate Partner and Family Violence · Elder Abuse and Neglect · Disability Rights and Representation
