Taking Away Choice — The Wrong Answer to Domestic Violence
By Meg Stone, MPH. Stone is the executive director of IMPACT Boston, an organization that works to prevent violence and abuse by giving people the tools to protect their safety and advocate for healthy relationships and sexual respect in their communities. A long-time domestic violence advocate with a degree in public health, she has, in her own words, “a strong interest in raising awareness of the issues facing women who present to emergency departments with injuries related to abuse. My professional background includes training nurses and first responders in asking about domestic violence and documenting incidents of abuse on medical records.”
This post is longer than our usual, but we thought it was worth running in entirety. The names and identifying details of those mentioned have been changed.
In the mid-1990s it was rare in most places for nurses and social workers to call domestic violence organizations when women came to the emergency department with injuries related to abuse. I only remember one call from a hospital social worker in the upstate New York town where I worked as an advocate at the local battered women’s program.
Carolyn, the director of the battered women’s service, called me at home on my day off. Nobody else was available, she said, so could I please please […]
