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J Pain Symptom Manage · Apr 2014
Case ReportsIntimate partner violence in an outpatient palliative care setting.
- Carmella Rose Culver Wygant, Eduardo Bruera, and David Hui.
- Department of Social Work, The University of Texas M. D. Anderson Cancer Center, Houston, Texas, USA. Electronic address: cwygant@mdanderson.org.
- J Pain Symptom Manage. 2014 Apr 1; 47 (4): 806813806-13.
AbstractAlthough a few studies have evaluated intimate partner violence (IPV) in the oncology setting, to our knowledge no studies exist of IPV among palliative care patients. IPV may be exacerbated at the end of life because patients and their caregivers often experience significant stressors associated with physical, emotional, social, and financial burdens. We discuss IPV in the palliative care setting using the example of a patient with advanced cancer who experienced IPV. A better understanding and awareness of IPV at the end of life could help clinicians support and counsel patients and ameliorate the suffering caused by this “unspoken” trauma. We further discuss 1) the prevalence and indicators of IPV, 2) how to initiate conversations about IPV, 3) the resources available to clinicians, and 4) various management strategies.
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