Health response to family violence : 2015 Violence Intervention Programme evaluation Christine McLean, Jane Koziol-McLain and Nick Garrett
By: McLean, Christine.
Contributor(s): Koziol-McLain, Jane | [Garrett, Nick].
Material type: BookSeries: CITR report.Publisher: Auckland, New Zealand : Centre for Interdisciplinary Trauma Research, Auckland University of Technology, 2016Description: electronic document (95 pages) ; PDF file: 6.47 MB.ISSN: 2422-8540 (Online); 2422-8532 (Print).Subject(s): New Zealand. Ministry of Health | CHILD ABUSE | DOMESTIC VIOLENCE | HEALTH | INTERVENTION | INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE | PROGRAMME EVALUATION | SCREENING | VIOLENCE INTERVENTION PROGRAMME (VIP) | NEW ZEALANDDDC classification: 362.8292 KOZ 2015 Online resources: Click here to access online | Summary | VIP evaluation project CITR report, 2016, no. 15Summary: The Ministry of Health (MOH) Violence Intervention Programme (VIP) seeks to reduce and prevent the health impacts of family violence and abuse through early identification, assessment and referral of victims presenting to designated District Health Board (DHB) services. The Ministry of Health-funded national resources support a comprehensive, systems approach to addressing family violence, particularly intimate partner violence (IPV) and child abuse and neglect (CAN). This report documents the results of four work streams for the 2015 VIP Programme Evaluation. These are: (1) DHB Delphi self audits of programme inputs (system infrastructure) assessed against criteria for an ideal programme; (2) VIP Snapshot clinical audits (outputs) in six services to measure programme service delivery; (3) assessment of VIP self audit findings and programme implementation within DHBs; and, (4) description of DHB submissions of Model for Improvement Plan-Do-Study-Act (PDSA) cycles. This report provides Government, the Ministry, DHBs and service users with information and accountability data on family violence intervention programme implementation. VIP contributes towards the NZ Government’s cross-government work programme to reduce family and sexual violence,3 the NZ Government’s Delivering Better Public Services, Supporting Vulnerable Children Result Action Plan, and the Ministry’s Statement of Intent 2014 to 2018. (From the Executive summary). Record #5418Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Access online | Family Violence library | Online | Available | ON17080006 | |
Report | Family Violence library | TRO 362.8292 KOZ 2015 | Available | FV17050008 |
CITR report, 2016, no. 15
The Ministry of Health (MOH) Violence Intervention Programme (VIP) seeks to reduce and prevent the health impacts of family violence and abuse through early identification, assessment and referral of victims presenting to designated District Health Board (DHB) services. The Ministry of Health-funded national resources support a comprehensive, systems approach to addressing family violence, particularly intimate partner violence (IPV) and child abuse and neglect (CAN).
This report documents the results of four work streams for the 2015 VIP Programme Evaluation. These are: (1) DHB Delphi self audits of programme inputs (system infrastructure) assessed against criteria for an ideal programme; (2) VIP Snapshot clinical audits (outputs) in six services to measure programme service delivery; (3) assessment of VIP self audit findings and programme implementation within DHBs; and, (4) description of DHB submissions of Model for Improvement Plan-Do-Study-Act (PDSA) cycles.
This report provides Government, the Ministry, DHBs and service users with information and accountability data on family violence intervention programme implementation. VIP contributes towards the NZ Government’s cross-government work programme to reduce family and sexual violence,3 the NZ Government’s Delivering Better Public Services, Supporting Vulnerable Children Result Action Plan, and the Ministry’s Statement of Intent 2014 to 2018. (From the Executive summary). Record #5418