one of the JAMA/Archives
journals, shows women who are victims of intimate partner
violence tend to have different patterns of facial injury than
women who experience facial trauma from other causes.
Temple University facial
plastic surgeon Oneida Arosarena, MD, FACS, and her colleagues
reviewed six years worth of medical and dental records from 326
women treated for facial trauma at the University of Kentucky
Medical Center. Arosarena also saw this type of abuse first
hand.
"I remember a patient who
suffered a nasal fracture at the hands of her husband," said
Arosarena, an associate professor in the department of
otolaryngology at the School of Medicine. "I repaired her
injuries and social workers found her safe housing, but she
still went back to him. That was a very touching case because it
wasn't just about fixing someone's facial fracture; it involved
social work and a community of health care workers trying to
help this woman."
Stories like these pushed
Arosarena to ask her patients difficult questions about their
relationships. Those answers, coupled with her team's research,
revealed women who are injured by an intimate partner tend to
suffer from distinct types of upper facial injuries, while those
injured from other causes, such as a car accident or fall, are
more likely to suffer lower facial fractures. In other words,
brain injuries or breaks around the eye socket and cheekbones
would signal intimate partner violence, whereas a broken jaw
might not. The findings surprised Arosarena and her
co-researchers.
"We fully expected the
injuries to be distributed like they are in other traumas, but
they weren't."
Of the 326 women treated for
facial trauma, 45 patients were assault victims, including 18
documented victims of intimate partner violence, while 24 of the
remaining 26 assault victims could not or did not identify their
assailant. Other common causes of injury included car crashes
(139 patients), falls (70 patients) and unknown or undocumented
causes (35 patients).
Unlike domestic violence,
which may be perpetrated by a spouse, sibling or other family
member, intimate partner violence is more specifically described
as abuse by a spouse or significant other. Experts estimate more
than one in four women in this country suffer from intimate
partner violence. That figure along with this research has
Arosarena hopeful that the particular pattern of injury may tip
off doctors when women are being beaten.
"This research will hopefully
make first responders and trauma surgeons more aware that there
is a correlation between intimate partner violence and certain
facial injuries. And we hope it prompts them to ask just how
those injuries happened."
Other authors in the study
include Travis Fritsch, MS, Intimate Partner Violence
Surveillance Project, Kentucky Injury Prevention and Research
Center; Richard Haug, DDS, University of Kentucky; Yichung Hsueh,
MD, University of Louisville; and Behrad Aynehcki, MD, State
University of New York, Downstate Medical Center. |