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IRIS+ programme extends the health care response to domestic abuse

Press release issued: 26 January 2024

Expanding the IRIS (Identification and Referral to Improve Safety) domestic abuse programme to include men and children and young people is both feasible and potentially cost-effective, University of Bristol researchers have found.

Success in identifying women affected by domestic abuse through IRIS — a specialist domestic violence and abuse (DVA) training, support and referral programme for general practices — is growing. However, men and children and young people are rarely identified and referred for specialist support. Recognising this gap, a study by researchers from Bristol’s Centre for Academic Primary Care has looked at the feasibility of expanding the scope of support to include them.

IRIS has been positively evaluated in a randomised controlled trial. Maintained by IRISi, the programme is now running in around 50 areas across the UK. While continuing to address the needs of women, the IRIS+ intervention, developed and tested by Bristol researchers in collaboration with IRISi and DVA agencies, extends support to men experiencing or perpetrating DVA and children and young people living with or experiencing DVA in their relationships.

Key findings

The National Institute for Health and Care Research-funded study found that IRIS+ successfully enabled the identification and direct referral of 44 children and young people (15% of total 300 referrals) and 29 men (mostly survivors, 10% of total referrals).

It also revealed a high referral rate for women, doubling from the rate in the original IRIS trial. This suggests that the added intervention components on men and children, rather than potentially weakening clinicians’ responses to women, heightened their general alertness for DVA.

Over two-thirds of referred women and children and young people, and almost half of all referred men received direct support from the service. The study demonstrated health and quality of life benefits for men and children supported by IRIS+.

An economic model indicated that IRIS+ is likely to be cost-effective or even cost-saving from a societal perspective.

The researchers used mixed methods to assess the feasibility of the intervention in two urban areas in England and Wales in a mixture of IRIS-trained and non-IRIS trained general practices, including:

  • before and after intervention questionnaires
  • data extraction from medical records and DVA agencies, and
  • semi-structured interviews with clinicians and patients.

Dr Eszter Szilassy, Senior Research Fellow at the Centre for Academic Primary Care, and study lead, said: “Domestic abuse affects nine million adults in England and Wales, with societal costs exceeding £66 billion annually. Our findings show that primary care is well-placed to provide a pathway for specialist support to all patients affected by DVA. The next step involves exploring the effectiveness and cost-effectiveness of IRIS+ on a larger scale.”

Medina Johnson, CEO at IRISi, added: “Domestic violence and abuse is a gendered issue but recognising the significance of responding comprehensively to all those impacted – be they victims/survivors or perpetrators – we acknowledge the crucial role of our health system in providing support. By expanding and improving programmes and responses within healthcare to encompass men and children, we strive to aid everyone affected, contributing to the collective effort for a safer society for all.”

IRIS+ is part of the REPROVIDE (Reaching Everyone Programme of Research On Violence in diverse Domestic Environments) programme, an independent research programme funded by the National Institute for Health and Care Research (Programme Grants for Applied Research), (RP-PG-0614-20012).

The views expressed in this publication are those of the authors and not necessarily those of the National Institute for Health and Care Research or the Department of Health and Social Care.

Read the papers

Feasibility of a reconfigured domestic violence and abuse training and support intervention responding to affected women, men, children and young people through primary care by Eszter Szilassy et al. in BMC Primary Care

Primary care system-level training and support programme for the secondary prevention of domestic violence and abuse: a cost-effectiveness feasibility model by Madeleine Cochrane et al. in BMJ Open

Find out more about the study

Visit the study website.

Help and support

If you have experienced domestic violence and abuse and would like support, you may find it helpful to contact one of the organisations listed below:

  • National Domestic Violence Helpline Freephone 0808 2000247 (24hr). Free 24hr confidential helpline for women experiencing domestic violence and abuse, and their friends, family and work colleagues.
  • RESPECT Men’s Advice Line Freephone 0808 801 0327 (Monday-Friday 9am-5pm). An advice and support line for men experiencing domestic violence and abuse.
  • ManKind Initiative 01823 334244 (Weekdays 10am to 4pm). A confidential helpline for male victims of domestic abuse and domestic violence.
  • CRUSH information and referral line 0800 014 9084. A structured programme of group support and empowerment for young people in the age range of 13 – 19 who have witnessed, experienced or are at risk of domestic abuse.
  • The Samaritans Freephone 116 123 (24hr). Telephone helpline for people to talk at any time, about whatever they are going through or whatever is worrying them.
  • Victim Support Freephone 0808 1689111. Independent charity providing free and confidential support to help people affected and impacted by crime.

Further information

About the Centre for Academic Primary Care

The Centre for Academic Primary Care (CAPC) at the University of Bristol is a leading centre for primary care research in the UK, one of nine forming the NIHR School for Primary Care Research.

It sits within Bristol Medical School, an internationally recognised centre of excellence for population health research and teaching.

Follow on Twitter: @capcbristol and on LinkedIn.

About IRISi

IRISi is a pioneering social enterprise leading the development and implementation of evidence-based programmes to improve the healthcare response to gender-based violence. IRIS, our flagship programme, is a specialist domestic violence and abuse (DVA) training, support and referral programme for General Practices that has been positively evaluated in a randomised controlled trial.

Core areas of the programme include ongoing training, education and consultancy for the clinical team and administrative staff, care pathways for primary health care practitioners and an enhanced referral pathway to specialist domestic violence services for patients with experience of DVA.

In 2021, the UK implemented the Domestic Abuse Act to enshrine a comprehensive response to DA in legislation. The accompanying Domestic Abuse Statutory Guidance, issued by the Home Office in 2022, targeted both statutory and non-statutory bodies, and recommended implementing IRIS nationally.

IRISi’s second intervention, the ADViSE programme extends the success of IRIS to sexual health clinics, supporting clinicians to identify and respond to patients affected by Domestic & Sexual Violence and Abuse (D&SVA). This evidence-based programme also ensures a simple referral pathway to a named specialist in a local frontline service. Aligned with the demographic typically served by sexual health clinics, ADViSE also facilitates the identification of a more extensive and diverse range of patient groups, providing visibility and support for individuals from minority groups.

Follow IRISi on ‘X’: @irisintervent, Linkedin: @IRISi-interventions or Instagram: @irisintervent

About the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR)

The mission of the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) is to improve the health and wealth of the nation through research. We do this by:

  • Funding high quality, timely research that benefits the NHS, public health and social care;
  • Investing in world-class expertise, facilities and a skilled delivery workforce to translate discoveries into improved treatments and services;
  • Partnering with patients, service users, carers and communities, improving the relevance, quality and impact of our research;
  • Attracting, training and supporting the best researchers to tackle complex health and social care challenges;
  • Collaborating with other public funders, charities and industry to help shape a cohesive and globally competitive research system;
  • Funding applied global health research and training to meet the needs of the poorest people in low and middle income countries.

NIHR is funded by the Department of Health and Social Care. Its work in low and middle income countries is principally funded through UK Aid from the UK government.

The NIHR is the research partner of the NHS, public health and social care.

 

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