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Barriers
Mental Health staff as well as other health care workers can play
a key role in the identification and assessment of domestic violence victims.
They can also prevent obstacles which delay, impede, or actually seem
to legitimize the violence a victim can be experiencing. As the Mental
Health System Power and Control Wheel on the previous page indicates,
mental health system power and control are often used to violate confidentiality,
ignore the victim’s needs, and trivialize or minimize the abuse, all of
which can contribute to the escalation of violence in a client’s life.
Mental Health Staff
Barriers
- Fear of
Involvement
Research on mental health staff indicates that even in cases
where domestic violence is clearly present, staff members’ fear of involvement
prevents them from providing appropriate intervention. The fear is often
expressed as not wanting to open “Pandora’s Box.”
- Time Constraints
Lack of adequate time to screen or assess clients seen in a
mental health center is also a barrier to successful intervention. This
may be even more of a factor in managed care settings or in clinics
where staff are often allotted only 10 minutes per client. Research
suggests, however, that adequate training and skill can effectively
identify domestic violence patients even with time constraints.
- Mental Health
Staff Attitudes & Misconceptions About Domestic Violence
Believing in myths and/or adopting stereotypical thinking about
domestic violence can impeded identification and assessment.
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