Public Health Directives in a Pandemic: Paradoxical Messages for Domestic Abuse Victims in Four Countries
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Background
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
3.1. Top-Down: National Media Messaging
“So, I think we were very slow to recognise the literal way in which people were interpreting that [message]”(UK Interview 7—Scotland)
“Sort of gave it a solo spotlight over that sort of 8, 9, 10 months where people said ‘Okay, DV is a really important thing’ ”(Stakeholder 5—Ireland)
“[on Operation Faoiseamh] we cannot underestimate how powerful that was. It was powerful because it was named. It was also powerful because Garda [the police] were enabled and empowered to do the work that they really actually want to do. And perpetrators were on notice that they would be identified and pursued. And that meant a huge amount”(Stakeholder 7—Ireland)
“So, one of the things for me is those public awareness campaigns run by them [the Welsh government] what they were really keen to do, was to just push that message out there of, ‘you are not alone and home shouldn’t be a place of fear’. So, they were much broader, they weren’t sort of focusing on one space. They were just sending that message out there, out there, out there.”(UK Interview 4—Wales)
3.2. Top-Down: Political Leadership
“The coronavirus pandemic heightens the risk of gender-based violence as women may be experiencing emotional and physical abuse behind the walls of their homes.”(President Ramaphosa, 30 April 2021)
“I respect our president, but sometimes, the politicians talk the talk, but they don’t walk the walk. You know, they do a lot of promises, which we haven’t seen happen yet. Our budget gets cut most of the time every year. It’s good to tell a country of how many women died and what just happened that happened, but we haven’t seen it at ground zero”(Interview S5—South Africa)
“And I’ve noticed, even sort of the last six months, ministers are much more keyed up on these issues and they’re much more interested”.(UK Interview 10—Scotland)
3.3. Traditional Media vs. Social Media
“I think the positive side of Covid is that domestic abuse, and particularly coercive control… has actually come to the fore hugely, partly because… we’re all imprisoned really and how we react has become much more to the forefront of media attention.”(UK Interview 21—England)
“There were lots of media articles about DV. The media is interested. But does that filter down to women in the suburbs living with DV? I don’t know. There was a lot of talk about women going into lockdown, and survival.”(Australian Interview 7)
“My concern is what comes after and …as the press slides away, whether some of these …improvements actually lead to real change. We need change in convictions, we need change in support … for perpetrators. We need more resources, all of that. And whether that then still has the interest of the press, I don’t know.”(UK Interview 22—England)
3.4. Bottom-Up Messaging: Localised, Community Based Messaging
“these are small communities still and, you know, their advocates and their representative groups know where they are”(Stakeholder 3—Ireland)
“It wasn’t in other languages. That is why our support workers were ending up with extra work... we had to incur the cost of calling in interpreters to be able to relay that message to our service users. Because, of course, they’re scared, they didn’t know what was happening.”(UK Interview 23—Wales)
“I think that, as usual, there was not enough or there was kind of under-acknowledgement of the specific ways in which that would change perpetration and affect perpetration, and what was available for perpetrators, although we did see an increase in people [perpetrators] contacting the phone lines.”(UK Interview 2—England)
4. Discussion
4.1. Summary of Outcomes
4.2. Discussion of Findings
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Gregory, S.; Holt, S.; Barter, C.; Christofides, N.; Maremela, O.; Mwanda Motjuwadi, N.; Humphreys, C.; Elliffe, R.; Stanley, N. Public Health Directives in a Pandemic: Paradoxical Messages for Domestic Abuse Victims in Four Countries. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 14148. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192114148
Gregory S, Holt S, Barter C, Christofides N, Maremela O, Mwanda Motjuwadi N, Humphreys C, Elliffe R, Stanley N. Public Health Directives in a Pandemic: Paradoxical Messages for Domestic Abuse Victims in Four Countries. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(21):14148. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192114148
Chicago/Turabian StyleGregory, Soma, Stephanie Holt, Christine Barter, Nicola Christofides, Ogopoleng Maremela, Nobulembu Mwanda Motjuwadi, Cathy Humphreys, Ruth Elliffe, and Nicky Stanley. 2022. "Public Health Directives in a Pandemic: Paradoxical Messages for Domestic Abuse Victims in Four Countries" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 21: 14148. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192114148
APA StyleGregory, S., Holt, S., Barter, C., Christofides, N., Maremela, O., Mwanda Motjuwadi, N., Humphreys, C., Elliffe, R., & Stanley, N. (2022). Public Health Directives in a Pandemic: Paradoxical Messages for Domestic Abuse Victims in Four Countries. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(21), 14148. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192114148