Effectiveness

Mixed Evidence

.

.

.

.

.

Mixed Evidence

¿Quieres saber más acerca de esta clasificación? Consulte nuestro manual metodológico.

Description

Visitation programs, also referred to as second-response interventions, adopt multi-agency approaches to domestic and gender-based violence reduction that often bring together police officers, social service workers, and victim advocates.
These programs were initiated in the 1980s with the goal of assisting victims of recurring domestic violence incidents (intimate partner abuse, intrafamily abuse, and elder abuse, among others). The programs typically consist of a “ second-response” visit to victims of abuse 24 hours to 14 days after the initial police response on the assumption that, in this immediate post-incident period, victims will be more receptive to interventions and more willing to consider behavioral and lifestyle changes.
A team, usually consisting of a police officer and a victim advocate, comes to the home to assist the victim – and sometimes the offender – with the goal of preventing further violence and finding long-term solutions to the problem. Victims receive information about their legal rights and options, the cyclical nature of family violence, obtaining a restraining order, and seeking shelter or other assistance and relocation services, all of which are intended to provide victims with greater independence and lessen their dependence on the abuser.

Country of application
  • United States
Evidence

A systematic review by the Campbell Collaboration based on 10 (experimental and quasi-experimental) studies found that second-response programs did not statistically significantly affect the likelihood of revictimization, but slightly increased the likelihood of re-reporting to the police. The authors interpret these results to mean that while the intervention does not affect the continuation or cessation of family violence, it may slightly increase a victim’s willingness to report incidents to the authorities. Given that all studies were conducted in the United States and that there were differences in the mode of implementation, further evaluations were recommended [1].
The updated systematic review (from 2021) covered 15 experimental and quasi-experimental studies, and found no evidence that this type of intervention reduced revictimization (the reduction found is not statistically significant). However, the more rigorous experimental studies indicated that second-response interventions were associated with a statistically significant 22% increase in the odds of relapse to reported family maltreatment, with no significant variability in results across individual studies. The authors conclude that second-response interventions are associated with some level of reduction in domestic violence against women when the visit occurs within 72 hours of the event, and that they may increase the risk of violence when the visit occurs after 72 hours, but further in-depth research is needed to confirm this finding [2].

Bibliography

[1] Davis, R. C., Weisburd, D., Taylor, B. (2008). Effects of Second Responder Programs on Repeat Incidents of Family Abuse. Campbell Systematic Reviews, 4(1), 1–38. https://doi.org/10.4073/csr.2008.15

[2] Petersen, K., Davis, R. C., Weisburd, D., Taylor, B. (2022). Effects of second responder programs on repeat incidents of family abuse: An updated systematic review and meta‐analysis. Campbell Systematic Reviews, 18(1), e1217. https://doi.org/10.1002/cl2.1217

Evaluated cases

Domestic Violence Home Visit Intervention (DVHVI)

Joint Law Enforcement-Social Services Approach in New York City

Second Responder Intervention

Police Response to Domestic Violence Emergencies (West Midlands)

Family Violence Response Team (FVRT)

Proactive Police Contact with Domestic Violence Victims

Why might the cases evaluated have different levels of effectiveness in relation to their respective type of solution?
Click here to understand why.

Some cases were not included in the evidence bank due to deficiencies detected in the methodology of their impact evaluations.
Click here to see the list

 

Image
flag

Send us your study!

Have you participated in impact evaluation studies of interventions to prevent crime, violence or disorder? Send us your study. It will be evaluated and may be included in the Evidence Bank!

Contact us