Videoconferencing for Domestic Violence Victims
— Providing Access to the Judicial System
By Karen Possessky, MSW, LSW
Social Work Today
Vol. 5 No. 5 P. 33
• Temperature
• Pulse
• Respiration
• Blood Pressure
• Domestic Violence Screen?
Go to the emergency department (ED) and a nurse will
check your vital signs during triage. From there, a physician will
examine you and order additional tests. Most of us trust that this
process will pinpoint our ailment. But what if the ailment is domestic
violence?
Estimates show that the United States spends $4.1
billion every year on direct healthcare costs related to domestic
violence (National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, 2003).
Healthcare settings cannot ignore the prevalence of domestic violence
when costs are so high and victims so plentiful. Roughly 22% to 35%
of all women seeking treatment in the ED are abused by a partner,
husband, or ex-boyfriend (American Medical Association). Most will
not volunteer information about the abuse.
Today, many healthcare facilities use a screening
tool to identify victims. The domestic violence screening practice
grew in the 1990s when the Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare
Organizations (JCAHO) developed standards for identifying victims
in EDs. However, the broad guideline fails to instruct EDs on how
to specifically identify and assess victims. Providers are left to
interpret the standard and develop a screening process on their own.
The result tends to be a written policy that complies with JCAHO requirements
but lacks a provision for ensuring that screening for abuse is adequately
done.
Luckily, a resource exists to help develop screening
systems through consultation and technical assistance. Domestic Violence
HELP is a national nonprofit agency with a goal and purpose to reduce
domestic violence through:
• H — healthcare consultation;
• E — education;
• L — legal systems advocacy; and
• P — promoting awareness.
According to President and Cofounder Betsy Burke,
starting a screening protocol can take a short or lengthy period of
time depending on administrative support. Based on her past experience,
she states that it takes a “synergistic combination of the right
people in the right place at the right time.” Therefore, success
begins with administrative support but also requires written policy
and procedure, a valid screening tool, and education for staff conducting
the screening.
Mercy Hospital in Pittsburgh successfully developed their screening
system for domestic violence in this way. A five-point questionnaire
is completed during triage for every patient who passes through the
ED. Lorrie Bonaccorsi, RN, BSN, states, “I believe if you approach
it in a caring way, the patient will open up” about abuse. The
aid of a reliable questionnaire and trained staff helps identify victims,
which in turn, creates an opportunity for providing help.
More Than
Identifying Victims
Identifying patients who are victims of domestic violence requires
healthcare workers to link them to the right resources for protection
from abuse. Offering phone numbers and educating patients on the dangers
of domestic violence may not be enough for abolishing the malignancy
of domestic violence—it’s like partially removing a tumor.
We can do more to ensure that these patients get the necessary protection
by helping them access the judicial system.
The Allegheny County judicial system, like most, spins
a web of complexities that makes it difficult for victims to know
how to file for a protection order. Protection from Abuse (PFA) orders
can be filed after hours and on weekends at a single location in the
downtown area of Pittsburgh. For some, getting to the location requires
several buses that may not operate in the middle of the night and
for others, presenting themselves at a location known for filing PFA
orders can be hazardous.
Victims risk danger when they appear at the courthouse
because abusers may be there. The highest risk of death and injury
occurs when victims leave their abuser. Petitioning the court for
a PFA order can be intimidating.
Technology
Trends
PFA orders benefit victims, but only if the orders are accessible
and enforceable. A legal document that protects against abuse provides
partial peace of mind and the knowledge that a serious step has been
taken to leave the abuser and end the relationship. The accessibility
of protection orders must improve because without it, there is no
enforceability. The conundrum is how to improve victims’ access
to the judicial system without increasing their risk of harm and vulnerability.
District Attorney, Stephen A. Zappala, Jr., sees a
solution to this problem and currently promotes the operation of several
remote PFA stations at various hospitals in Allegheny County. Zappala,
a supporter of domestic violence prevention, believes strongly in
the use of technology. Roughly three years ago, the project for installing
videoconferencing equipment to create remote stations began. The inspiration
for using technology for PFA hearings stems from the state’s
use of videoconferencing equipment for arraignments. With two different
distributors for the equipment and a cash donation from Verizon Wireless,
the project eased its way toward implementation.
Project coordinator Art Keenan acts as a liaison between
the district attorney’s office and the community, and he works
with interested area hospitals to establish remote PFA stations. Currently,
there are six hospitals in and around the Pittsburgh area that have
fully operating PFA stations. The first step toward implementing a
PFA station is gaining approval from the hospital administration.
The next requirement is to establish a binding contract between the
hospital and the district attorney’s office. A formal written
policy for PFA station use helps hospital workers know when and how
to operate the videoconferencing equipment. Finally, installation
of the equipment in a private area or room allows court hearings to
be held with the use of standard courtroom etiquette—a quiet
atmosphere free of commotion.
Womensplace, an agency providing assistance to victims
of domestic violence, works with McKeesport and Braddock Hospitals
in Allegheny County to operate the remote PFA project. The hospitals
host the PFA stations while agency employees facilitate the process
for getting the court order. The project has been operating since
April 2004 in the area of Allegheny County known as the Mon Valley,
allowing victims greater access to the judicial system. Previously,
the area had geographical barriers caused by the need to take several
buses to get to night court in downtown Pittsburgh. Womensplace Executive
Director, Laurie MacDonald, estimates that prior to implementation
of the remote PFA project, 30% of its clients endured the risk of
traveling downtown to get orders. Since the initiation of the project,
MacDonald reports that there has been a 70% increase in the number
of PFA orders filed in any given month. The process of getting a permanent
PFA order is lengthy, but a “surprising number of people continue
the process because they have the opportunity to get it started,”
says MacDonald.
Ellen Tomko, medical/legal advocate at Womensplace,
facilitates a great number of the videoconferencing PFA orders. She
reports that in one year, she conducted 145 PFA orders, 13 of which
occurred during the week between Christmas and New Year’s. “It’s
scary to a lot of [victims] because they don’t realize they’re
going to be on TV until we turn it on,” says Tomko. While waiting
for the judge to come on screen, Tomko makes valuable use of the down
time. Recognizing that her clients are in a state of trauma, Tomko
talks to them about their fears and reassures them that filing a PFA
order is the right thing to do.
The impact of Zappala’s videoconferencing PFA
project especially benefits the domestic violence victims of the Mon
Valley. Tomko points out that many of the women do not have vehicles
or money of their own, so it is nearly impossible for them to trek
several miles to the downtown Pittsburgh Night Court building. Videoconferencing
capability allows victims to utilize resources that are close and
known to them. According to Tomko, the reality settles in with victims
when the “judge says he or she is going to sign the order and
fax it to us.” Victims respond with mixed emotions once the
emergency PFA is in their hands. “It’s empowering, but
scary too,” states Tomko.
Making a Difference
Maria* presented to the ED, leaving her abusive boyfriend in the middle
of the night. She was at home sleeping soundly until her boyfriend
came home drunk and eager to fight. She defended herself the best
she could before escaping the house with only minor injuries. Talking
to the ED social worker, Maria indicates interest in getting a PFA
order. She looked confused and surprised when the social worker said
she could file a PFA order right in the hospital. “Nah-uh, are
you serious?” she asked.
Bethany* came to the ED by ambulance after her fiance
punched her in the face during an argument over money. Separated from
her children while in the ED, she worried about their protection as
well as her own. The social worker offered her the opportunity to
file a PFA order on the hospital premises for both her and her children.
She took it. When asked whether she would have filed a PFA order if
she had to go to the court building, she responded, “Probably
not.”
The outcome for domestic violence victims improves
with triage screening and collaborative efforts such as those in Allegheny
County between the district attorney’s office, hospitals, and
community agencies. These services offer easy access to a complex
judicial system and the opportunity for victims to speak out about
the violence in their life. Opportunity leads to an increase in the
number of victims taking action against domestic violence, which hopefully
will lead to a decrease in abusive relationships.
— Karen
Possessky, MSW, LSW, works as a clinical social worker at Allegheny
General Hospital in Pittsburgh. Prior to that, she worked as a social
worker in the emergency department at Mercy Hospital and helped establish
the Protection from Abuse (PFA) videoconferencing project there. She
continues to work at Mercy on an as needed basis and facilitates emergency
PFA orders on occasion.
* Indicates anonymous interviews with actual victims
of domestic violence who filed Protection from Abuse orders via videoconferencing
equipment.
For additional information regarding setting up a
domestic violence screening tool at your healthcare facility, contact
DV HELP at 412-361-4357.
Art Keenan, project coordinator in the Allegheny County
District Attorney’s Office, is available for brief consultation
on establishing remote Protection from Abuse stations by calling 412-350-4447.
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