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Advocacy interventions to reduce or eliminate violence and promote the physical and psychosocial well-being of women who experience intimate partner abuse Carol Rivas, Jean Ramsay, Laura Sadowski, Leslie L. Davidson, Danielle Dunne, Sandra Eldridge, Kelsey Hegarty, Angela Taft & Gene Feder

By: Rivas, Carol.
Contributor(s): Ramsay, Jean | Sadowski, Laura | Davidson, Leslie L | Dunne, Danielle | Eldridge, Sandra | Hegarty, Kelsey | Taft, Angela | Feder, Gene.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticleSeries: Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews.Publisher: Cochrane Library, 2015Subject(s): ADVOCACY | DOMESTIC VIOLENCE | HEALTH | INTERVENTION | INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE | PHYSICAL ABUSE | PSYCHOLOGICAL ABUSE | SYSTEMATIC REVIEWSOnline resources: Click here to access online In: Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, 2015, Issue 12Summary: "Results suggest some benefits from advocacy. However, most studies were underpowered. Clinical and methodological heterogeneity largely precluded pooling of trials. Therefore, there is uncertainty about the magnitude of benefit, the impact of abuse severity, and the setting. Based on the evidence reviewed, intensive advocacy may improve short-term quality of life and reduce physical abuse one to two years after the intervention for women recruited from domestic violence shelters or refuges. Brief advocacy may provide small short-term mental health benefits and reduce abuse, particularly in pregnant women and for less severe abuse." (Authors' conclusions). Record #4987
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Online Available ON16040013

Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, 2015, Issue 12

"Results suggest some benefits from advocacy. However, most studies were underpowered. Clinical and methodological heterogeneity largely precluded pooling of trials. Therefore, there is uncertainty about the magnitude of benefit, the impact of abuse severity, and the setting. Based on the evidence reviewed, intensive advocacy may improve short-term quality of life and reduce physical abuse one to two years after the intervention for women recruited from domestic violence shelters or refuges. Brief advocacy may provide small short-term mental health benefits and reduce abuse, particularly in pregnant women and for less severe abuse." (Authors' conclusions). Record #4987