Epidemiology Program
Permanent URI for this community
Visit the Epidemiology Program for more information.
The UDSpace community for this program contains open-access research materials created by members of this department.
Browse
Browsing Epidemiology Program by Subject "advocacy"
Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
Results Per Page
Sort Options
Item Disruption, adaptation, and maintenance of domestic violence services during the COVID-19 pandemic(Critical Public Health, 2024-04-18) Horney, Jennifer A.; Pena, Annaliese; Scales, Sarah E.; Fleury-Steiner, Ruth E.; Camphausen, Lauren C.; Miller, Susan L.COVID-19 disrupted many aspects of domestic violence services including sheltering, in-person advocacy, and access to mental health, visitation, and legal services. Increased demand for services occurred concurrent with the highest levels of pandemic disruptions. Adaptations to many systems and services were made to address survivor’s changing needs. To understand how various aspects of service provision were disrupted during the pandemic, we surveyed a national census of U.S. based domestic violence direct service agencies. Email addresses were collected from online directories and each agency received a link to complete a survey using the online platform Qualtrics. The survey included five sections: services provided; work environment during COVID-19; disruptions caused by COVID-19; personal and organizational disaster preparedness; and demographics. Twenty-two percent of 1,341 agencies responded to the survey. At the start of the pandemic, the most disrupted services were legal and court, sheltering, and mental health/counselling services. Hazard pay, flexible scheduling, and additional information technology support were most frequently mentioned supports provided to mitigate disruptions and support providers and advocates. Disruptions and supports changed over the course of the pandemic. The COVID-19 pandemic disrupted the provision of services and advocacy to victims and survivors of domestic violence. Adaptations were made as new control measures were available (e.g. vaccines) and lessons learned were identified (e.g. successful implementation of virtual legal and court services). Maintaining supportive measures post-pandemic will require continued investment in this chronically underfunded, yet critical, sector and applying lessons learned from COVID-19 related disruptions and adaptations.