
Turkish Health Workers Condone Wife Beating,
Study Says
ScienceDaily (Dec. 13, 2007) —
Domestic violence is an inherent problem in Turkey, and healthcare workers are
doing little to combat the prevalence of wife beating, according to research
published in the online open access journal, BMC Public Health. A survey of
medical personnel reveals that a lack of training and a cultural acceptance of
domestic violence may prevent victims from obtaining the support they
desperately require.
173 medical staff from the emergency department of a Turkish university
hospital responded to a questionnaire about domestic violence. 69.0% of the
female and 84.7% of the male respondents declared that they agreed or partially
agreed to at least one reason to justify physical violence.
Accepted grounds for intimate domestic violence included lying to or
criticising the male and failure to care for children. Moreover, about
three-quarters of the nurses and male physicians and over half of female
physicians agreed that deceiving the husband justified physical punishment
Deceiving the husband is a taboo in Turkey and it is among the most important
reasons for honour murders.
The vast majority of healthcare workers declared that they were aware of the
clinical signs of domestic violence, yet more detailed questions highlighted
significant gaps in their knowledge. Few staff knew the correct legal procedures
for reporting cases of wife-beating.
"We found that there are no clear procedures to manage the victims of
domestic violence in the emergency department in Turkey. However, informing the
victims about their legal rights and starting the legal procedure right after
the incident could be a life-saving intervention," noted the study's
co-author H. Asli Davas Aksan. .
There is little training on the issues of domestic violence for emergency
department medical staff in Turkey. Nine out of ten people surveyed had not
received any training at all, and of those that had, almost three quarters said
it was inadequate.
Adapted from materials provided by BioMed
Central.
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