What first responders think about domestic violence will horrify you
Imagine that it’s midnight and you’re hiding in a bathroom, terrified. You didn’t want to call 911, but you were desperate. When the paramedics arrive, you feel momentarily relieved. Then they start to ask you questions—Have you had anything to drink tonight? Was there an argument? What did you say that triggered the violence?
Suddenly, you’re flooded with guilt and shame. You start to feel like it was all your fault. They ask if you want to go to the hospital, but you decline. No more questions. No more talking. You just want to go to bed and forget the incident ever happened.
For millions of victims of domestic violence in this country, this scenario is sickeningly familiar, as new research suggests the very people sent to help them may make them feel more trapped. According to a new study published in the Journal of Forensic and Legal Medicine, too many EMTs and paramedics buy into the same myths about domestic violence as the public—namely, that the victim is somehow responsible for the abuse.
For the study, researchers specializing in mental health and social work at Florida State University and Canada’s University of Windsor recruited 403 emergency medical professionals in Florida to anonymously answer questions about their attitudes toward domestic violence victims. Given that many abuse victims are reluctant to go to a hospital or get police involved, first responders are often the only medical help victims encounter—and their support can be pivotal.
The study participants were surveyed directly after completing a training course on domestic violence cases. Nearly three-quarters of them reported that they had dealt with victims of domestic violence as part of their job, and their attitudes toward victims were disturbing:
- 33% were neutral or agreed with the statement that domestic violence is a “normal reaction” to day-to-day stress and frustration.
- 46% were neutral or agreed that if a victim doesn’t disclose abuse there is little they can do to help.
- 35% were neutral or agreed that if the victim stays in the relationship then they themselves are responsible for the abuse.
- 30% reported being dissatisfied with the victim.
- 21% were neutral or agreed that “battered women secretly want to be abused.”
Overall, the study found that 32% to 43% of first responders reported attitudes that suggest victims are responsible for the abuse. The findings are even more unsettling given that respondents answered the survey directly after completing the training course, which was based on the National Prevention Toolkit on Domestic Violence for Medical Professionals.
But the researchers weren’t shocked. “The endorsement of these stereotypes by participants in our study is not unique to EMS personnel,” said Elizabeth Donnelly, one of the study’s authors and a professor in the School of Social Work at the University of Windsor, “these views are widespread.”
Indeed, study after study has shown that not only does the public buy into these myths, but many medical and law enforcement professionals do, too. And perhaps not shockingly, when victims feel judged, they are much less likely to pursue help, out of fear for their safety.
As the authors point out, there are myriad reasons why a victim of domestic violence might feel like he or she cannot leave a relationship, from financial instability to fear for their children to fear of the police. In 2014, after a video surfaced of professional football player Ray Rice assaulting his now-wife in an elevator, survivor Beverly Gooden launched the #WhyIStayed campaign, in which thousands of victims came forward with their reasons for not leaving abusive relationships, attempting to cultivate understanding and spread awareness.