000 03361nam a22002657a 4500
999 _c12579
_d12579
001 OPH 2022 0003
003 PILC
005 20240720153319.0
008 230621b xxu||||| |||| 00| 0 eng d
040 _beng
_cFEU-NRMF MEDICAL LIBRARY
_erda
041 _aenglish
050 _aOPH 2022 0003
245 _aIntimate partner violence (IPV) - associated ophthalmologic injuries among women :
_ba systematic review /
_cKatherine Marl R. Ferrer and Maria Donna D. Santiago.
260 _aFairview, Quezon City:
_bDepartment of Ophthalmology, FEU-NRMF,
_c2022.
300 _billustrations tables;
_c(in folder)
_ewith flash drive (soft copy).
336 _2rdacontent
_atext
337 _2rdamedia
_aunmediated
338 _2rdacarrier
_avolume
504 _aIncludes appendices and bibliographical referernces.
520 _aAbstract: Intimate partner violence (IPV) or interpersonal violence remains to be underreported in the global sense. Philippines is not unique in terms of the experiences of IPV female victims compared to their foreign counterparts. To describe patterns of IPV-associated ophthalmologic injuries among women. A systematic literature search was conducted from 2009 to 2022 of PubMed, Google Scholar, HERDIN, and Cochrane Library for observational studies. Those studies that looked into physical violence resulting to ophthalmologic orbital injuries and elaborated identification and referral practices of women IPV survivors with ophthalmologic orbital injuries were included. This paper excluded conference abstracts, case reports and case series, review articles, practice guidelines, commentaries or editorials. Risk of bias (ROB) assessment was done using the Newcastle-Ottawa Quality Assessment Scale (NOS). Content analysis was done to synthesize relevant data of all participants based on their demographic profiles and injuries. Summary of themes of all the included articles were also presented. Seven studies including 911 patients were included in this review. Out of all the included patients, 206 (22.62%) of IPV-related facial injuries involved the eyes with or without concurrent injuries involving other parts of the region of the face among female patients. ROB analysis showed three studies with poor and four studies with good ROB assessment. General classification of injuries was based on the affected thirds of the face: upper, middle, and lower. The middle third is still the most affected in the face secondary to IPV including blowout fractures. Left-sided injuries were still more common compared the right-sided injuries. BE AWARE rapid assessment tool was one of the proposed screening tools among the IPV victims. Referral of patients to social work, law enforcement, counseling services, local agencies, psychiatry, psychology, and appropriate task force were identified as part of moral obligation of physicians to IPV victims. Recognition of IPV victims should be paramount among patients presenting facial injuries in the emergency department. This study was able to highlight the different patterns of injuries, factors associated with IPV with ophthalmologic orbital injuries, practices and/or protocols done among female IPV victims.
521 _aRESDOP
700 _aFerrer, Katherine Marl R., MD.
_dinvestigator
700 _aSantiago, Maria Donna D., MD.
_eadviser
942 _2lcc
_cRU