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Listening to the voices of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women in regional and remote Australia about traumatic brain injury from family violence : a qualitative study Elaine Wills and Michelle Fitts

By: Wills, Elaine.
Contributor(s): Fitts, Michelle.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticleSeries: Health Expectations.Publisher: Wiley, 2024Subject(s): ABORIGINAL & TORRES STRAIT ISLANDER PEOPLES | DOMESTIC VIOLENCE | FAMILY VIOLENCE | HEALTH | INDIGENOUS PEOPLES | INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE | IWI TAKETAKE | PHYSICAL ABUSE | RURAL AREAS | VICTIM/SURVIVORS' VOICES | WOMEN | INTERNATIONAL | AUSTRALIAOnline resources: DOI: 10.1111/hex.14125 (Open access) | Related article in The Conversation, 21/8/2024 In: Health Expectations, 2024, 27(4): e14125Summary: Indigenous women experience high rates of family violence-related head injuries. At present, lived experience accounts from Indigenous women are absent, which results in incomplete understandings and inadequate responses that have detrimental impacts on them and their families. The aim of this study was to gain insight into Indigenous women's personal and family perspectives regarding violence-related traumatic brain injury (TBI), including impacts on life, as well as decision-making. (From the abstract). Record #8989
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Health Expectations, 2024, 27(4): e14125

Indigenous women experience high rates of family violence-related head injuries. At present, lived experience accounts from Indigenous women are absent, which results in incomplete understandings and inadequate responses that have detrimental impacts on them and their families. The aim of this study was to gain insight into Indigenous women's personal and family perspectives regarding violence-related traumatic brain injury (TBI), including impacts on life, as well as decision-making. (From the abstract). Record #8989