Women???s Experiences of Domestic Violence and Mental Health: Findings from a European Empowerment Project
Author(s)
Lloyd, MicheleRamon, Shulamit
Vakalopoulou, Athina
Videm??ek, Petra
Meffan, Caroline
Roszczynska-Michta, Joanna
Roll??, Luca
Contributor(s)
EducationSchool of Education
School of Health and Social Work
Nursing, Midwifery and Social Work
Department of Nursing (Children, Learning Disability and Mental Health) and Social Work
Social Work, Mental Health and Learning Disabilities
Department of Adult Nursing and Primary Care
Keywords
domestic violence, mental health, strengths-based recovery, empowerment, professional learning
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Show full item recordAbstract
This document is the Accepted Manuscript version of the following article: Michele Lloyd, Shula Ramon, Athina Vakalopoulou, Petra Videms??k, Caroline Meffan, Joanna Roszczynska-Michta, and Luca Roll??, ???Women???s Experiences of Domestic Violence and Mental Health: Findings From a European Empowerment Project???, Psychology of Violence, Vol. 7 (3): 478-487, July 2017. The final, definitive version is available online at DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/vio0000111. Published by the American Psychological Association.Objective: Research shows that women experiencing domestic violence and mental health problems often fall into gaps in services between support for domestic violence and support for mental health. This article reports on an action-research project adopting a strengths-based approach to recovery funded by the European Commission. Multimethod research was carried out in 5 European countries examining how interconnections of domestic violence and mental health impact the lives of women, how their lives can be improved by empowering strategies, and how service providers??? professional learning can be developed. Women survivors??? strengths and posttraumatic growth in the context of domestic violence remains a considerably underresearched area and the study provides new insights into adopting a strengths-based framework. Method: Free training programs were designed, delivered, and evaluated for 2 groups of participants (n = 136) pertaining to women service users and mental health service providers (men and women) working with abused women. Results: Program-evaluation data gained through surveys and focus groups showed that women participants reported growth in self-esteem and coping skills, whereas professionals felt better equipped to address the tandem issues of domestic violence and mental health. Conclusion: Findings extend current knowledge about the barriers and facilitators to empowerment and strengths-based recovery perspectives, professional learning, and offer a more nuanced understanding of women???s agential ability for posttraumatic growth. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2017 APA, all rights reserved)
Date
2018-02-08Type
Special issueIdentifier
oai:uhra.herts.ac.uk:2299/19759Lloyd , M , Ramon , S , Vakalopoulou , A , Videm??ek , P , Meffan , C , Roszczynska-Michta , J & Roll?? , L 2017 , ' Women???s Experiences of Domestic Violence and Mental Health: Findings from a European Empowerment Project ' Psychology of Violence, Special Issue on Gender-Based Violence: Evidence from Europe , vol 7 , no. 3 , pp. 478-487 . DOI: 10.1037/vio0000111
PURE: 12924572
PURE UUID: 826f4f8a-d189-4810-a147-4bd92ddd2884
Scopus: 85018754688
http://hdl.handle.net/2299/19759
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/vio0000111