08.12.2019

The IRIS Programme: Intelligent Kindness in Action.

In the fourteenth of our 16 blogs for 16 days, Jacqueline Gantley, Clinical Lead for IRIS in Wales, talks about the incredible impact the programme has had both personally and professionally.

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07.12.2019

“The findings of too many Domestic Homicide Reviews have shown the need for better and more consistent practice.” How Pathfinder Aims to Combat DVA.

In the thirteenth of our 16 blogs for 16 days, Nicole Jacobs, the Designate Domestic Abuse Commissioner for England and Wales talks about the work of the Pathfinder project and why it is so...

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06.12.2019

The Solution? The Impact of IRIS in the Real World.

In the twelfth of our 16 blogs for 16 days, Lucy Downes, Project Lead for Social Franchising at IRISi talks about the real life impact the IRIS programme has on women all across the...

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05.12.2019

GamCare: Women, Gambling and DVA

In the eleventh of our 16 blogs for 16 days, Zoe Snelgrove, Team Leader at GamCare explains why women victims of DVA are more likely to develop gambling problems and what the team...

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05.12.2019

The Scale of Domestic Violence and Abuse

In the tenth of our 16 blogs for 16 days, Estela Barbosa, Data Scientist for IRISi, talks bout the shocking scale of DVA. This is an abridged version of the information you can find...

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03.12.2019

Is DVA Identification the Practice of Dentistry?

In the ninth of our 16 blogs for 16 days, Professor Paul Coulthard, Dean of Dental School at Barts and The London School of Medicine and Dentistry, talks about the role that dentist can...

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02.12.2019

The Reality of DVA: The Women behind the Quotations

In our eighth blog for the 16 days, second year student Sophie Lloyd looks into the feedback given by IRIS service users and the effect that studying them has had on her personally.

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01.12.2019

The Reality of DVA: “My situation had become so normal to me and so I guess I had just accepted it.”

Beth lived with DVA for 22 years. It was only when she was asked during a routine trip to her GP that her life started to change. In the third of our survivor blogs,...

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30.11.2019

The Reality of DVA: “I can honestly say that I was the last person to realise that I was being subjected to domestic violence”

In our second survivor blog, and the sixth of our 16 blogs for 16 days, Naima talks about the impact of repeated failures by health care professionals who ignored the signs of Domestic...

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29.11.2019

The reality of DVA: “The scars of what we witness and hear as children never leave, even as adults.”

Addasa Donaldson* never had the opportunity to disclose the abuse she witnessed as a child. In the fifth of our 16 Blogs for 16 Days, she talks about the devastating effect that DVA...

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The IRIS Programme provides specialist advocacy and support to patients registered at IRIS-trained practices who have experienced domestic abuse.

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Partners

AVA
AVA
AVA

AVA is an expert, groundbreaking and independent charity working across the UK.

Their vision is a world without gender based violence and abuse. They aim to  inspire innovation and collaboration and encourage and enable direct service providers to help end gender based violence and abuse particularly against women and girls.AVA’s work is focused around those areas where they can make the best contribution to ending violence and abuse. They do this by making sure that survivors get the help and support they need in the here and now, through providing innovative training that has a proven direct impact on the professional practice of people supporting survivors of violence and abuse

developing a range of toolkits, e-learning and other material that supports professionals to provide effective and appropriate support to survivors of violence and abuse

using our influence and networks to ensure survivors voices are heard. We work closely with AVA in many areas including the Pathfinder project

https://avaproject.org.uk

SafeLives
SafeLives
SafeLives

SafeLives are a national charity dedicated to ending domestic abuse, for good. We combine insight from services, survivors and statistics to support people to become safe, well and rebuild their lives. Since 2005, SafeLives has worked with organisations across the country to transform the response to domestic abuse, with over 60,000 victims at highest risk of murder or serious harm now receiving co-ordinated support annually. SafeLives are members of the Pathfinder consortium.

http://www.safelives.org.uk/about-us

IMKAAN
IMKAAN
IMKAAN

Imkaan is a UK-based, Black feminist organisation. We are the only national second-tier women’s organisation dedicated to addressing violence against Black and minoritised women and girls i.e. women and girls which are defined in policy terms as Black and ‘Minority Ethnic’ (BME). The organisation holds nearly two decades of experience of working around issues such as domestic violence, forced marriage and ‘honour-based’ violence.

They work at local, national and international level, and in partnership with a range of organisations, to improve policy and practice responses to Black and minoritised women and girls. Imkaan works with it’s members to represent the expertise and perspectives of frontline, specialist and dedicated Black and minoritised women’s organisations that work to prevent and respond to violence against women and girls. Imkaan delivers a unique package of support which includes: quality assurance; accredited training and peer education; sustainability support to frontline Black and minoritised organisations; and facilitation of space for community engagement and development. They are a part of the Pathfinder Consortium.

https://www.imkaan.org.uk

The University of Bristol CAPC
The University of Bristol CAPC
The University of Bristol CAPC

The Centre for Academic Primary Care (CAPC) is a leading centre for primary care research in the UK, one of nine forming the NIHR School for Primary Care Research.  It is part of Bristol Medical School, an internationally recognised centre of excellence for population health research and teaching.

A dedicated team of researchers at the Centre work on domestic abuse projects and IRISi is a co-collaborator and partner on some of these projects including ReProvide, HERA and DRiDVA.

The Health Foundation
The Health Foundation
The Health Foundation

The Health Foundation is an independent charity committed to bringing about better health and health care for people in the UK. The Health Foundation’s Exploring Social Franchising programme aims to generate a deeper understanding of the potential of social franchising models for scaling effective health and social care interventions within the NHS.

We are one of four project teams participating in the programme to develop a social franchise to enable the sustainable spread of our intervention, the IRIS Programme. We receive funding and support from the Health Foundation, including technical expertise on social franchising, and attend programme learning events. The Health Foundation has also commissioned a programme-wide evaluation to support understanding of the use of social franchising in the UK health and care system. We and our franchisees will support the evaluation through co-designing data collection requirements, providing access to data as requested, hosting site visits and attending learning events.

https://www.health.org.uk

STADV
STADV
STADV

Standing Together Against Domestic Violence is a UK charity bringing communities together to end domestic abuse. They bring local services together to keep people safe

Most public services weren’t designed with domestic abuse in mind, and they often struggle to keep people safe. Poor communication and gaps between services put survivors at risk.

STADV aim to end domestic abuse by changing the way that local services respond to it. They do this through an approach that they pioneered, called the Coordinated Community Response. The Coordinated Community Response brings services together to ensure local systems truly keep survivors safe, hold abusers to account, and prevent domestic abuse.

Their model of a coordinated local partnership to tackle and ultimately prevent domestic violence is now widely accepted as best practice. They are also a part of the Pathfinder consortium.

http://www.standingtogether.org.uk

Spring Impact
Spring Impact
Spring Impact

Spring Impact is a not-for-profit social enterprise born out of the frustration of seeing social organisations constantly reinventing the wheel and wasting scarce resources. Spring Impact uses a combination of tested commercial and social principles and extensive practical expertise to support organisations to identify, design and implement the right social replication model to scale their social impact.

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