Authors

Fiona Giles

PhD, Research Fellow, Department of General Practice and Primary Care, Faculty of Medicine, Dentistry and Health Sciences, The University of Melbourne, Melbourne, Vic

Coercive control: Recognising relational patterns that affect patient wellbeing

This article uses the Sense of Safety Theoretical Framework to name processes that build sense of safety in healthy relationships. It enables recognition of patterns of coercive control.


What do I do when they disclose? Responding to intimate partner violence and coercive control in primary care

This article outlines how to respond generally to disclosures in general practice using the World Health Organization ‘LIVES’ framework.


Women’s preferences for how health practitioners respond to coercive control by a partner: Open-ended survey qualitative analysis

This study explored Australian women’s preferences for supportive messaging from health practitioners when discussing coercive control.