Women survivors of intimate partner violence talk about using e‑health during pregnancy: a focus group study
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Fernández López, Rodrigo; De León De León, Sabina; Torres Cantero, Juan Carlos; López Megías, Jesús; Zapata Calvente, Antonella LudmilaEditorial
BMC
Materia
Intimate partner violence Pregnancy eHealth Video counseling Safety plan Healthcare providers
Fecha
2022-03-31Referencia bibliográfica
Fernández López, R... [et al.]. Women survivors of intimate partner violence talk about using e-health during pregnancy: a focus group study. BMC Women's Health 22, 98 (2022). [https://doi.org/10.1186/s12905-022-01669-2]
Patrocinador
European Commission European Commission Joint Research Centre 881648Resumen
Background: Pregnancy is a period of particular vulnerability to experience intimate partner violence against
women (IPVAW). eHealth strategies have been implemented to identify women exposed to IPVAW and to combat the
abuse and empower them, but there is a lack of evidence on the use of these strategies among pregnant women.
This work aims to identify the needs, concerns and preferences of survivors about the use of eHealth strategies to
counsel and empower pregnant victims of IPVAW in antenatal care.
Methods: A focus group of six IPVAW survivors who had been pregnant was conducted and open questions about
the use of eHealth strategies were asked. The session was recorded, transcribed and thematically analyzed. We identified
three main themes: needs and worries of pregnant women experiencing IPVAW, key aspects of video counseling
sessions and usefulness of safety planning apps.
Results: Women highlighted the relevant role of healthcare professionals—especially midwives—in the identification
of IPVAW and the wellbeing of their children as one of the main concerns. They perceived video counseling and
safety planning apps as valuable resources. The preferred contents for a video counseling intervention were awareness-
raising of the situation, self-esteem and legal advice. They also proposed safety and pregnant-related aspects
that should be taken into account in the design of the video counseling sessions and the safety planning app.
Conclusions: Video counseling sessions and safety planning apps are potentially useful tools to counsel and
empower women who experience IPVAW during pregnancy. Midwives play a key role in this endeavor.