Women exposed to intimate partner violence : a Foucauldian discourse analysis of South African emergency nurses’ perceptions

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Authors

Van der Wath, Anna Elizabeth

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Makerere University Medical School

Abstract

BACKGROUND : Emergency nurses’ understanding and interpretation of intimate partner violence influence the care they provide to women exposed to intimate partner violence. OBJECTIVES : The aim of this study was to uncover discourses that may help understand emergency nurses’ responses towards women exposed to intimate partner violence. MATERIALS AND METHODS : This study used a qualitative design to explore emergency nurses’ discourses. Purposive sampling was used to select 15 participants working at an emergency unit in a public hospital in South Africa. Data were collected through three focus group discussions comprised of five emergency nurses each. Foucauldian discourse analysis was used to analyse the transcribed data. RESULTS : Four themes emerged from the focus group discussions: (1) strong women subject themselves to societal expectations and endure intimate partner violence, (2) women are vulnerable and powerless against intimate partner violence, (3) intimate partner violence is a private and secret phenomenon, and (4) emergency nurses have limited scope to intervene when they encounter women exposed to intimate partner violence. CONCLUSION : Emergency nurses are in a position to intervene in intimate partner violence through portraying a non-judgmental approach that lay the foundation for disclosure, supporting women to change their intimate partner violence (IPV) situations, documentation, referral and safety planning.

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Keywords

Intimate partner violence (IPV), Foucauldian discourse analysis, Emergency nursing

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Citation

Van der Wath, A. Women exposed to intimate partner violence: a Foucauldian discourse analysis of South African emergency nurses’ perceptions. African Health Sciences 2019;19(2): 1849-1857. https://dx.DOI.org/10.4314/ahs.v19i2.7.