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Health intervention in gender violence

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 March 2020

C. Noval Canga
Affiliation:
Hospital Clinico Universitario Valladolid, Psiquiatria, Valladolid, Spain
N. De Uribe Viloria
Affiliation:
Hospital Clinico Universitario Valladolid, Psiquiatria, Valladolid, Spain
I. Sevillano Benito
Affiliation:
Hospital Clinico Universitario Valladolid, Psiquiatria, Valladolid, Spain
J.A. Espina Barrio
Affiliation:
Hospital Clinico Universitario Valladolid, Psiquiatria, Valladolid, Spain
P. Marques Cabezas
Affiliation:
Hospital Clinico Universitario Valladolid, Psiquiatria, Valladolid, Spain
L. Gallardo Borges
Affiliation:
Hospital Clinico Universitario Valladolid, Psiquiatria, Valladolid, Spain
A.I. Segura Rodriguez
Affiliation:
Hospital Clinico Universitario Valladolid, Psiquiatria, Valladolid, Spain
M. Gomez Garcia
Affiliation:
Hospital Clinico Universitario Valladolid, Psiquiatria, Valladolid, Spain
F. Uribe Ladron De Cegama
Affiliation:
Hospital Clinico Universitario Valladolid, Psiquiatria, Valladolid, Spain

Abstract

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Introduction

Male and female social roles were built on a historical inequality. Gender violence is a public health problem of the first order. We consider it important to conduct a study to improve diagnosis and interventions. From the Theory of Roles Moreno, each role has a complementary role that maintains the link. In gender violence predominates control, domination, submission and asymmetry of functions as dysfunctional elements of a relationship, which should be symmetrical.

Methodology

We reviewed 48 stories of women who come for abuse mental health team from 2013 to 2016. We analyzed the following aspects: socio-demographic data (age, nationality, marital status, education, jobs, dependent children); reason for consultation and number of queries; violence; roles, because of maintenance and interventions.

Results

Eighty percent Spanish. It occurs at all levels of education; 60% have children; 70% were derived from primary care for others reasons; almost 90% suffered psychological violence, 25% physical and economic, sexual only 3 women, 52.08% of women adopt a submissive role, passive-aggressive 20.83% and 25% ambivalent; maintenance of the violence is reinforced by the psychological dependence that occurs in all women (one in 45.83%).

Conclusions

Roles analysis is an effective method in the diagnosis of abuse and designing appropriate intervention. Psychotherapy, benefits of a psychopharmacological treatment that lessens the suffering and lets face their difficulties. It is important to ask about abuse at any level of care, because it contributes more to cover a hidden reality. The Psychological and economic dependence. They establish and maintain the mistreatment.

Disclosure of interest

The authors have not supplied their declaration of competing interest.

Type
e-Poster Viewing: Epidemiology and social psychiatry
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2017
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