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  • Australian nursing and midwifery student beliefs and attitudes about domestic violence: A multi-site, cross-sectional study

    Author(s)
    Doran, Frances
    Hutchinson, Marie
    Brown, Janie
    East, Leah
    Irwin, Pauletta
    Mainey, Lydia
    Mather, Carey
    Miller, Andrea
    van de Mortel, Thea
    Sweet, Linda
    Yates, Karen
    Griffith University Author(s)
    van de Mortel, Thea F.
    Year published
    2019
    Metadata
    Show full item record
    Abstract
    Nurses and midwives have a professional responsibility to identify and provide effective care to those experiencing domestic violence. Pre-registration preparation may develop this capability. In order to inform curriculum development, this study explored Australian nursing and midwifery students’ attitudes and beliefs about domestic violence. Data were collected between June and October 2017. Descriptive statistics were calculated and comparative analysis performed on independent variables. Thematic analysis was performed on open-ended qualitative responses. Participants included 1076 students from nine Australian universities. ...
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    Nurses and midwives have a professional responsibility to identify and provide effective care to those experiencing domestic violence. Pre-registration preparation may develop this capability. In order to inform curriculum development, this study explored Australian nursing and midwifery students’ attitudes and beliefs about domestic violence. Data were collected between June and October 2017. Descriptive statistics were calculated and comparative analysis performed on independent variables. Thematic analysis was performed on open-ended qualitative responses. Participants included 1076 students from nine Australian universities. The majority were enrolled in nursing programs (88.4%), followed by midwifery (8.6%), and combined nursing/midwifery (2.4%) programs. There was no statistically significant difference in scores by year level across all subscales, suggesting there was no developmental change in beliefs and attitudes toward domestic violence over the course of study. Nursing students held views that were more violence-tolerant than midwifery students. Australian and Chinese-born males were more likely to refute that domestic violence is more common against women. Students had a limited understanding of domestic violence suggesting a critical need to address undergraduate nursing and midwifery curricula.
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    Journal Title
    Nurse Education in Practice
    Volume
    40
    DOI
    https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nepr.2019.08.007
    Subject
    Nursing
    Curriculum and pedagogy
    Domestic violence
    Intimate partner violence
    Nursing and midwifery
    Student attitudes
    Student beliefs
    Publication URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10072/387505
    Collection
    • Journal articles

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