Emergency departments (EDs) are critical points of contact for treating and responding to the needs of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women who have experienced traumatic brain injury (TBI) caused by violence. This study aimed to explore how care, support, and treatment can be improved for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women who have experienced TBI caused by violence by drawing on the perspectives of ED staff in a regional hospital in Queensland (Australia). Using purposeful and snowballing sampling, 24 health professionals (including Indigenous hospital liaison officers and Aboriginal health workers and nursing, medical, and allied health staff) were recruited to participate in the study. Using reflexive thematic analysis, four key recommendations were identified: (1) development of a formalised pathway for head injury from family violence; (2) providing Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women with a timely acute-care-to-community pathway; (3) resourcing hospital- and community-based services for all Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women and their children; and (4) strengthening responses from health professionals to violence and head injury. The findings inform opportunities to strengthen ED and system-level responses to improve care and support for Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander women who have experienced this injury.
The Verdict
Be the first to vote on this assessment.
Embed Badge
Add this badge to your site to show the AI classification for this content.
[](https://real.press/content/b0d854e6-cec7-4826-baf4-61004058b56c)