Royal Melbourne hospital family violence training framework 2018–2021

Caroline A. Fisher (Family Safety Team, Royal Melbourne Hospital, Parkville, Australia)
Helen Gill (Family Safety Team, Royal Melbourne Hospital, Parkville, Australia)
Georgina Galbraith (Family Safety Team, Royal Melbourne Hospital, Parkville, Australia)
Simone Sheridan (Family Safety Team, Royal Melbourne Hospital, Parkville, Australia)
Emily Morris (Family Safety Team, Royal Melbourne Hospital, Parkville, Australia)
Laura Bray (Family Safety Team, Royal Melbourne Hospital, Parkville, Australia)
Emma Handley (Family Safety Team, Royal Melbourne Hospital, Parkville, Australia)
Toni D. Withiel (Family Safety Team, Royal Melbourne Hospital, Parkville, Australia)

Emerald Open Research

ISSN: 2631-3952

Article publication date: 2 October 2020

Issue publication date: 23 December 2023

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Abstract

Family violence is a significant social and public health problem. In 2015 a Royal Commission into Family Violence was established in Victoria, Australia, following a number of family violence deaths that received a high coverage in the media. The commission findings were released in 2016. These emphasised the significant physical and psychological harm that is caused by family violence, and that this has wide ranging community impacts. Among the Commission's 227 recommendations a number pertained specifically to improving the response of the healthcare system, with a whole-of-hospital model for responding to family violence recommend-ed for all public hospitals.

Royal Melbourne Hospital (RMH) received a state government grant as part of the SHRFV project. RMH was formally partnered with Tweddle Child and Family Health Service and Dental Health Services Victoria, and also worked with associated service NorthWestern Mental Health, as part of the project. This document outlines the RMH Family Violence Training Framework, a whole-of-hospital transformation change project designed to implement Recommendation 95 from the Royal Commission. All funded services were encouraged to adapt the SHRFV project model to suit the local environment of their health service. This document outlines the RMH approach. RMH specifically focused on using an evidence based research and evaluation framework with a focus on in-depth training, underpinned by a clinical champions network.

Keywords

Citation

Fisher, C.A., Gill, H., Galbraith, G., Sheridan, S., Morris, E., Bray, L., Handley, E. and Withiel, T.D. (2023), "Royal Melbourne hospital family violence training framework 2018–2021", Emerald Open Research, Vol. 1 No. 14. https://doi.org/10.1108/EOR-14-2021-0001

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2022 Fisher, C.A. et al.

License

This is an open access work distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.


Corresponding author

Competing interests: No competing interests were disclosed.

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