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Coercion related to mental health and substance use in the context of intimate partner violence : a toolkit for screening, assessment, and brief counseling in primary care and behavioral health settings Carole Warshaw and Erin Tinnon

By: Warshaw, Carole.
Contributor(s): Tinnon, Erin.
Material type: materialTypeLabelBookPublisher: National Center on Domestic Violence, Trauma and Mental Health 2018Description: electronic document (34 pages) ; PDF file.Subject(s): COERCIVE CONTROL | DOMESTIC VIOLENCE | HEALTH SERVICES | INTERVENTION | INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE | MENTAL HEALTH | SCREENING | SUBSTANCE ABUSE | UNITED STATESOnline resources: Click here to access online | Access the website Summary: This toolkit provides trauma-informed guidance on integrating questions about mental health and substance use coercion into routine mental health and substance use histories and into in-depth intimate partner violence (IPV) assessments in primary care and behavioral health settings. This toolkit is intended to be used in conjunction with comprehensive guidance on trauma-informed approaches to screening, assessment, and brief intervention for intimate partner violence in healthcare, mental health, and substance abuse treatment settings (For additional guidance, see the resources section of the toolkit). Given the many forms of IPV and range of experiences people may have, being able to think creatively with survivors about their particular circumstances, priorities, and needs is critical to strategizing about safety and developing meaningful treatment options. (From the website). This toolkit was developed for the United States. Record #5984
Item type Current location Call number Status Date due Barcode
Access online Access online Family Violence library
Online Available ON18100007

This toolkit provides trauma-informed guidance on integrating questions about mental health and substance use coercion into routine mental health and substance use histories and into in-depth intimate partner violence (IPV) assessments in primary care and behavioral health settings. This toolkit is intended to be used in conjunction with comprehensive guidance on trauma-informed approaches to screening, assessment, and brief intervention for intimate partner violence in healthcare, mental health, and substance abuse treatment settings (For additional guidance, see the resources section of the toolkit). Given the many forms of IPV and range of experiences people may have, being able to think creatively with survivors about their particular circumstances, priorities, and needs is critical to strategizing about safety and developing meaningful treatment options. (From the website). This toolkit was developed for the United States. Record #5984