Objectives: To examine associations between history of domestic violence and health service use among mid-aged Australian women, adjusting for physical and psychological health status and demographic factors. Methods: Population-based cross-sectional postal survey (1996) 2 Furthermore, 51% of women attending an outpatient clinic 3 reported having experienced domestic violence. In studies done using data from hospital emergency departments in the US, lifetime prevalence of domestic violence has varied from 33% to 54%. 4,5 A study conducted in the United Kingdom (UK) revealed a lifetime prevalence of 41% for women attending their general practitioner, 6 while in an Irish study 39% of women attending their general practitioner had ever experienced physical violence from a partner.
7Some Australian studies show a similar difference in prevalence between nationally representative and clinical populations. For instance, a nationally representative population-based study found that 2.6% of women currently living in intimate relationships had experienced domestic violence, 8 while 22% of women attending their general practitioner had experienced domestic violence in the past 12 months. 9 However, some Australian clinic-based studies have revealed lifetime prevalence rates for domestic violence that were lower than those found in overseas studies, similar to the 23% lifetime prevalence of domestic violence found among women who took part in a national random sample 8 and lower than the lifetime prevalence of 28.5% found among a random sample of mid-aged women.