The COVID-19 infection which was first described in Wuhan, China in late 2019 became a pandemic that has profoundly affected all aspects of society worldwide and has been associated with complex changes in incidence and presentation of health problems [1]. To curb transmission of SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, three periods of reduced social mixing (lockdown periods) were imposed throughout 2020 and 2021 in England and Wales [2]. These were associated with wide closures and changes of all aspects of society, including closing schools, a shift of clinical consultations in primary care from face-to-face to virtual (online) consultations and difficulties accessing primary care [3, 4]. These have made it harder for people to report complex health issues, including abuse [4, 5]. Remote consultations can produce barriers in accessing support where the perpetrator lives with the person seeking support; for example in disclosure of incidences and accessing support for Domestic Violence and Abuse (DVA).
DVA is a long-standing violation of human rights that damages health and wellbeing, globally experienced by about 1 in 3 women [6] and remains an ongoing social and health concern. It includes physical, psychological, sexual and financial abuse, coercive control; can be about power and control; and between current or former intimate partners or adult family members. Women experience more repeated incidents, greater abuse and longer impact than men [7]. It requires a multi-dimensional response with the health care services playing an important role in identifying woman affected by DVA and referring them to DVA support programmes and services that can improve their safety and health outcomes [8]. In England and Wales, the majority of the support for people experiencing DVA comes from non-governmental organisations and charity sector DVA agencies [8]. However, general practice can provide a crucial link between people experiencing DVA and DVA support. The landmark national IRIS (Identification and Referral to Improve Safety) programme facilitated and monitored by IRISi, a social enterprise [9], has linked specialist DVA advocacy support with primary care [9]. It has been commissioned in 48 areas and has trained over 1,000 practices (> 12%) in England, Wales, Northern Ireland and the Channel Islands, with over 20,500 female patients referred from these practices in the past 10 years. Existing work by our group has evaluated the impacts of implementing IRIS in a pragmatic randomised trial [10], followed by a post-trial ‘real world’ implementation study [11], showing that IRIS is effective and cost-effective [12], with a sustained impact, which lapses if funding is withdrawn [13], while a recent editorial highlighted the importance of support mechanisms for woman experiencing DVA in the pandemic era [14].
Long periods where family groups are forced to spend time together, outside of the normal routine, can escalate and make it harder to disclose DVA [15, 16]. The severe physical distancing measures (‘lockdowns’) imposed by the UK Government from March 23, 2020 to control the spread of SARS-Cov-2 and its variants [2] are an example of enforced time together. These can have a detrimental impact on woman experiencing DVA and their families [16–18]. For example, when the majority of DVA support mechanisms shifted to online during the lockdowns, services were less accessible to woman experiencing DVA in their household. Isolation periods related to previous epidemics such as SARS, have been associated with increased psychological distress, stress, depression, sleep disorders and problematic substance abuse [19]; these are all factors that may contribute to the triggering and escalation of violence [20, 21]. Evidence is starting to emerge from a number of countries that the COVID-19 pandemic and its lockdowns have led to an increase in DVA incidence [22, 23]. For example, France, Brazil and Italy have all reported an increase in domestic violence during 2020 compared to previous years [24]. In addition, emerging evidence from Refuge, the organisation running the 24-hour national domestic violence helpline in England, suggests that calls to helplines have surged by 60% during 2020 compared to the equivalent period in the previous year [25]. These point towards evidence that the COVID-19 pandemic has resulted in an increase in DVA, but evidence on the impact of the COVID-19 national lockdowns on referrals from primary care to DVA support services is scarce.
Although the potential impact on DVA of societal lockdown – including loss of income and of contact with support networks - in response to a pandemic is likely to be more severe, there are some parallels between lockdowns and school holidays: added pressure to keep children occupied, and enforced family time spent outside of the normal daily routine. This could also lead to increased levels of abuse, and feelings of fear and isolation. WHO warned that longer time spent with abusive carers, without the safety of school services, will likely increase maltreatment and DVA incidence [26]. Calls to DVA helplines and police reporting of DVA have also been suggested to be lower during holidays and non-working days [27]. In England, emerging evidence also shows that fewer women are reporting domestic violence during the school holidays than outside of them [28]. Therefore, it is important to assess whether there is a school holiday effect on the number of referrals to services for woman experiencing DVA and how comparable this effect is to that of the first national lockdown.
In this paper we present the results of the first analysis from PRECODE (Primary Care Response to Domestic Violence and Abuse in the Covid-19 Pandemic); the protocol for which has recently been published [29]. The aim of this paper is to evaluate the impact of large-scale systemic closures, in our case proxied by both national lockdowns or school closures, on the number of referrals of patients from general practice to local IRIS DVA support programmes. To achieve this aim, we had two objectives. First, we quantified the impact of the first national COVID-19 lockdown from 2020 on the number of referrals to DVA services in England and compare this to the same time period in the preceding year. Second, we evaluated the impact of the school holidays on the number of referrals to DVA services in the three years preceding the pandemic and the period just after the first COVID-19 wave.