4906.0 - Personal Safety, Australia, 2012
ARCHIVED ISSUE Released at 11:30 AM (CANBERRA TIME) 11/12/2013
Page tools: Print Page Print All | ||||
ACTIONS TAKEN IN RESPONSE TO PARTNER VIOLENCE The 2012 PSS collected information about a person's help seeking behaviours in relation to their experience of partner violence. This included data about who the respondent first told about the violence and who they had ever sought advice or support from about the violence by their partner. This included advice or support from: formal sources such as health professionals, support services, police (etc); as well as from informal sources such as a friend or family member (refer Endnote 1). The concept of "seeking advice or support" relates to all of the sources from whom a person had sought advice or support from about their violent relationship (refer Endnote 2). Whilst the data about the first person told provides information about who is most likely to be the first "point-of-reveal" for persons who are experiencing partner violence (including accidental reveals by the respondent). Note that this data refers to the respondent's help seeking behaviours over the whole relationship with their current partner and/or most recently violent previous partner. This differs from data about actions taken in response to violence following a person's most recent incident of each type of violence (refer to the chapter on Selected Characteristics of different types of violence). Whether ever told anyone about partner violence Men were less likely than women to have ever told anyone about violence by a current partner. Men were also less likely than women to have ever told anyone about violence by a previous partner. Both men and women were more likely to reveal their experience of violence by a previous partner compared to violence by a current partner (Refer Table 23). Footnote(s): (a) Since the age of 15. Source(s): Personal Safety, Australia Footnote(s): (a) Since the age of 15. Most recently violent previous partner. Source(s): Personal Safety, Australia Persons who had never told anyone about partner violence: Current Partner
Previous Partner
Current Partner
Previous Partner
Advice or support seeking behaviours For both current and previous partner violence, men were less likely than women to seek advice or support about the violence (Refer Table 24). Footnote(s): (a) Since the age of 15. Source(s): Personal Safety, Australia Footnote(s): (a) Since the age of 15. Most recently violent previous partner. Source(s): Personal Safety, Australia Persons who had never sought advice or support: Current Partner
Current Partner
The 2012 PSS collected information about whether the police had ever been contacted (by the respondent or by someone else) about any of the violence they had experienced by their partner (Refer Table 25 and Table 26). Both men and women were unlikely to have contacted the police about any partner violence they had experienced. Where the police had been contacted about partner violence, it was more likely that women who had experienced partner violence had contacted the police than men. Footnote(s): (a) Since the age of 15. Includes where the police were contacted by the respondent or by someone else. Source(s): Personal Safety, Australia Footnote(s): (a) Since the age of 15. Most recently violent previous partner. Includes where the police were contacted by the respondent or someone by else. Source(s): Personal Safety, Australia Persons where police had never been contacted: Current Partner
Women who had contacted the police: Current Partner
Previous Partner
FURTHER INFORMATION Further details of the information collected in the 2012 PSS are provided in the Data Item List available in the Downloads Tab. Additional information may be made available by request, on a fee for service basis, through the ABS Information Consultancy, or on the Confidentialised Unit Record File which is expected to be released in March 2014. END NOTES Endnote 1 Respondents were asked whether they had ever sought advice or support from any of the following: General Practitioner (GP); Other health professional (e.g. nurse, psychologist, therapist); Counsellor or support worker; Telephone helpline (e.g. Lifeline, National Domestic Violence Hotline); Refuge or shelter; Police; Legal service (e.g. solicitor or Legal Aid); Financial service (e.g. Centrelink, financial counselling); Government Housing and Community Services (e.g. DHS); Friend or family member; Work colleague or boss; Priest/Minister/Rabbi etc; and Other. Endnote 2 ‘Advice or support’ means listening to the respondent, being understanding, making suggestions, giving information, referring respondent to appropriate services, or offering further help of any kind. It includes contacting or visiting any source of help from a friend to a professional organisation, so long as the respondent perceived that they were seeking advice or support. It excludes anyone who was told or found out about the partner violence, but from whom the respondent did not actively seek advice or support and help sought for injuries, which did not involve the respondent seeking advice or support. Endnote 3 Interviewers were trained to accept respondent's perception of whether a restraining order had been issued. Interviewers were trained to accept terminology used across different states of Australia to label violence orders including apprehended violence orders, domestic violence orders, intervention orders (etc). Any orders issued by a court or interim orders were also included.
|