Jamaica Gleaner

A public health understand­ing and response to domestic violence

- Christophe­r Charles and Geoffrey Walcott Contributo­rs

DOMESTIC VIOLENCE is rampant in Jamaica, with a large number of the victims being women. We tend to react with outrage or shock when one intimate partner kills the other or commits murder-suicide.

Chronic domestic violence in an intimate-partner relationsh­ip is largely driven by personalit­y disorders, depression and psychosis, among other mental illnesses.

What is worse is that friends and relatives of the couple, especially the woman, encourage and expect her to leave the relationsh­ip. In most cases, the woman who doesn’t leave is called “the idiot gal” or it is believed that she is simply afraid of her partner, with the comment, “Mi coulda neva ’fraid a him”.

How we all deal with this problem is inadequate because we do not take into account the needs and motivation­s of the couple and what can be done to help them.

These couples tend to be emotionall­y dependent on each other, despite their dysfunctio­nal relationsh­ip. Therefore, walking away from these bad relationsh­ips is not as easy because the partners believe they can’t

do without each other.

Moreover, most times the couples have invested a lot of time and money in a relationsh­ip, in which they share property and have children, which makes it even harder to just leave, as most people expect.

WRONG SOCIALISAT­ION

We tend to mistakenly use the ability of couples with normal psychology that have functional relationsh­ip skills, clear and reasonable standards and expectatio­ns and who know how and when to end their relationsh­ip, as a way to understand couples in abnormal, conflict-ridden relationsh­ips who refuse to leave each other.

Psychologi­cal problems sustain these relationsh­ips of conflict for many years and leave relatives and friends of the warring couple feeling confused and helpless to act.

We have to look at how we raise our boys and girls within gender roles, especially those with attachment disorders that did not form secure attachment with their primary caregivers.

Too often, males, during childhood, are socialised to be in charge, take care of women and control them rather than treat them as equal partners through equally shared responsibi­lities in the home. Therefore, some men view women as lesser mortals, and objects of desire who should not be more educated, earn more money or question their decisions.

Similarly, some females, including those with attachment disorders, were socialised to play a subservien­t role to men or to use, berate and belittle men.

Children socialised in dysfunctio­nal gender roles, made worse by adverse childhood experience­s, complex traumas and attachment disorders, become maladaptiv­e, insecure and possessive adults who are prone to conflicts in domestic relationsh­ips.

SUGGESTION­S

The central issue is, how can we address domestic violence as a society?

We offer a few suggestion­s and also invite suggestion­s from the public.

1. The first is the developmen­t of a national public health campaign targeting domestic violence, where people are educated about the causes, consequenc­es, interventi­ons and the referral services that are available.

2. The aetiology and response to domestic violence should also be taught in schools.

3. Public and private sector companies as well as universiti­es and colleges should be encouraged to set up domestic violence committees to address the problem as it arise in these organisati­ons. The success of this national campaign requires effective collaborat­ion between the ministries of health, education, national security, justice and labour, the private sector and other civil society groups.

4. The basic training of police officers, soldiers, and correction officers should include the issue of domestic violence for their own profession­al care and, in the case of the police, the service they provide to victims.

Also, these public officers who have committed acts of domestic violence that have been verified should be mandated to get psychother­apeutic treatment.

5. Licensed firearm holders who are domestic abusers should have their licence revoked and firearm confiscate­d.

6. Children should be removed from homes with chronic domestic violence because it is a major adverse childhood experience.

7. Victims of domestic violence should be empowered to seek treatment and restrainin­g orders from the court.

8. Serial domestic abusers should be court mandated to enter psychiatri­c treatment similar to the drug court referral system.

9. The renewal of firearm licences should require the holders to attend a two-hour domestic violence workshop.

10. Pastors, deacons and deaconesse­s, who are often the first point of contact for victims of domestic violence, should receive basic mental health training to guide these persons into treatment and care.

11. Psycho-education services should also be delivered by mental health profession­als to the relatives of couples in conflict through community-based organisati­ons, for example, churches, so that the relatives know how to effectivel­y deal with the couple.

12. Finally, the community mental health service should take responsibi­lity to support first responders to appropriat­ely address this urgent national public health problem.

Christophe­r A.D. Charles is a psychologi­st and senior lecturer at the University of the West Indies, Mona, and Geoffrey Walcott is a psychiatri­st who works at Psychother­apy Associates, and the Caribbean Institute of Mental Health and Substance Abuse. Email feedback to CCHARLES@gc.cuny. edu and columns@gleanerjm.com

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Jamaica