Measuring for primary prevention: An online survey of local community perspectives on family and domestic violence in regional Australia

PLoS One. 2023 Apr 10;18(4):e0284302. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0284302. eCollection 2023.

Abstract

Background: Family and domestic violence, encompassing diverse behaviours including physical, sexual, emotional and financial abuse, is endemic worldwide and has multiple adverse health and social consequences. Principal drivers include traditional gender values that disempower women. Changing these is a key prevention strategy. In Australia, high-quality national surveys provide data on public perspectives concerning family and domestic violence but may not capture community-level diversity. As part of a project for primary prevention family and domestic violence in outer regional Australia, our aims were to develop and administer a questionnaire-based survey suitable for the local community encompassing knowledge about, attitudes towards, and personal experiences of family and domestic violence, to describe and to investigate the theoretical (factor) structure and local socio-demographic predictors of responses, and to determine the extent to which the survey findings are locally distinctive.

Methods: The online community survey for local residents (≥15 years), comprised items on respondents' sociodemographic characteristics plus questions abridged from pre-existing national instruments on knowledge about, attitudes towards, and personal experiences of family and domestic violence. Responses were rake-weighted to correct census-ascertained sample imbalance and investigated using exploratory factor analysis, with sociodemographic predictors determined using multiple linear regression and dominance analysis.

Results: Among 914 respondents, males (27.0%), those from age-group extremes, and less-educated persons were underrepresented. Familiarity with diverse family and domestic violence behaviours was high among all subgroups. Poorer knowledge of the FDV behaviour continuum and attitudes supporting traditional gender roles and FDV were disproportionately evident among males, older respondents and those with lower education levels. Both the factor structure of extracted composite measures reflecting community perspectives and sociodemographic predictors of responses generally aligned with patterns evident in national data.

Conclusions: Local reinforcement of existing nationwide findings on community understanding of and attitudes towards family and domestic violence provides salience for targeted interventions.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Australia
  • Domestic Violence*
  • Female
  • Gender Identity
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Sexual Behavior
  • Surveys and Questionnaires

Grants and funding

The 'Conversations for Change: Accelerating efforts to prevent family violence' project was supported by Healthway grant 31994 (SCT, MCM, BN, KEM) (https://www.healthway.wa.gov.au/). Preliminary work that assisted with the development of LCAEVS was supported by a small grant from Desert Blue Connect (SCT, MCM, BN, KEM) (https://desertblueconnect.org.au/) that was matched by philanthropic funds administered by the School of Population and Global Health at The University of Western Australia (SCT, MCM, BN, KEM) (https://www.uwa.edu.au/schools/population-global-health). The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.