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(Referência obtida automaticamente do Web of Science, por meio da informação sobre o financiamento pela FAPESP e o número do processo correspondente, incluída na publicação pelos autores.)

The care network of the families involved in violence against children and adolescents: the Primary Health Care perspective

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Autor(es):
Carlos, Diene Monique ; Marchesini de Padua, Elisabete Matallo ; Pereira da Silva, Lygia Maria ; Iossi Silva, Marta Angelica ; Ude Marques, Walter Ernesto ; da Cruz Leitao, Maria Neto ; Carvalho Ferriani, Maria das Gracas
Número total de Autores: 7
Tipo de documento: Artigo Científico
Fonte: JOURNAL OF CLINICAL NURSING; v. 26, n. 15-16, p. 2452-2467, AUG 2017.
Citações Web of Science: 3
Resumo

Aims and objectivesTo contribute the understanding of the network care provided to families involved in family violence against children and adolescents (FVACA), from the Primary Health Care (PHC) perspective. BackgroundChildren and adolescents figure among the main victims of violence around the world, which occurs predominantly in the family context. PHC-guided network care has emerged as a new process that contrasts with traditional approaches, which rely on fragmented, punctual and compensatory actions and produce simplified and segmented interventions in response to complex phenomena like violence. The Paradigm of Complexity interacts with the network care approach and, by articulating the multiple dimensions of the research phenomenon, contributes to its understanding. DesignQualitative research, based on the Paradigm of Complexity. MethodsData were collected through minimal maps of the external institutional social network, focus groups and semi-structured interviews held with 41 PHC professionals in Brazil. The notions of comprehension and contextualisation as well as dialogical, recursive and holographic principles from complexity theory guided the data analysis. ResultsThe two thematic categories that emerged revealed reduced institutional networks, with low-density and homogeneous bonds, which resulted in fragmented care in all stages of the care process. ConclusionsAlthough the network organisation of care for the families involved in FVACA is fundamental, the construction of these networks still represents a great challenge, as it requires the joint work of a multiprofessional team. Relevance to clinical practiceFor nursing to respond to the contemporary care demands in a contemplative and pertinent manner, a perspective and a reference framework need to be developed, leading to broader and more contextualised actions, with a multidimensional approach to the families and communities of which child and adolescent victims of violence are a part. (AU)

Processo FAPESP: 14/23620-7 - Rede social e apoio social a famílias envolvidas na violência doméstica contra crianças e adolescentes: caminhos para o cuidado
Beneficiário:Diene Monique Carlos
Modalidade de apoio: Bolsas no Brasil - Pós-Doutorado