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Summer 2006
Volume IV, Issue II

Special Issue: Nursing Research With an Impact


Cover photo by
Chris Hartlove

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Feature: Wounded Hearts, Broken Lives | Next Section >

Biobehavioral Research 

Biobehavioral Research

Name: Anne "Nancy" Woods, PhD, CNM
Background: Nurse Midwifery Projects: Conducted the first known study to examine the relationships among intimate partner violence, post-traumatic stress disorder, and inflammatory cytokines. Her findings: Women who reported a history of partner violence had higher levels of pro-inflammatory cytokines in their blood, which can cause profound physical and psychological changes. A patient once told her: "I was sick of the abuse, so I left him. Then I realized I was sick because of the abuse.

There's no doubt this abuse is making millions of people sick. Abused individuals seek health care for a wide range of ailments. Some nurses refer to them as "frequent flyers" because they continually seek help for chronic health conditionsgastrointestinal pain, pelvic pain, fatigue, depression. "It's like playing that children's game, 'Whack-A-Mole,'" says Nancy Woods, PhD, CNM. "You treat one thing but then something else pops up."

Woods is at the forefront of research showing abuse not only causes physical problems, such as broken bones, urinary tract infections and sexually transmitted disease, but it also alters the body's immune response.

Her research has been among the first nationwide to identify a significant relationship between intimate partner violence, post-traumatic stress disorder, and pain-fatigue-depression symptoms, and elevated pro-inflammatory cytokines in women with a history of abuse. These higher pro-inflammatory levels in the blood, which were not explained by other factors, can lead to profound physical and psychological changes in the body.

Woods concluded that even a history of abuse can lead to ailments years later, such as pain, fatigue, depression, and anxiety, which make activities such as holding down a job or caring for children more difficult. "The mental health effects are driving the physical response," Woods says. "But if you think about it holistically, it makes sense... the body-mind-spirit are interconnected. What affects one aspect will impact the other."

Woods, who conducts research at the Shepherd's Clinic for the uninsured in Baltimore, says many health care professionals still don't ask about abuse. She recalls one woman who came regularly to the clinic, but had never been identified as an abuse victim. During a routine screen for violence, Woods asked her: "At any time, have you ever been harmed physically by your partner?" The woman responded: "Well, of course...," lifting her shirt to reveal a back marred by scars.

"It's that old saying," Woods says. "If you don't take a temperature, you don't find a fever."

 

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Johns Hopkins University School of Nursing

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 
   
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