Minnesota medicine
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Family violence is ubiquitous in our society and, thus, is encountered in all medical practices. The purpose of this study was to ascertain whether physicians wearing buttons with an anti-abuse message have more conversations about violence compared with physicians not wearing such buttons. Six of 11 family practice residents wore Minnesota Medical Association buttons that invited conversations about abuse. ⋯ Analyses comparing the two groups showed that the physicians wearing buttons had significantly more conversations than those not wearing buttons (c2 = 9.040, p < 0.005). Physicians wearing buttons had a higher percentage of days with conversations about domestic violence than physicians without buttons (c2 = 7.695, p < 0.01). From the significant p-values documented, we conclude that wearing the buttons increases conversations about family violence and makes physicians more consistent in talking about violence with patients.