EdX

Intimate Partner Violence (IPV): Interprofessional Strategies for Prevention and Response (edX)

Intimate Partner Violence (IPV): Interprofessional Strategies for Prevention and Response (edX)

In this course, learners will be introduced to key concepts, definitions, and theories of IPV from public health, social justice, and legal perspectives. Learners will also receive applied learning opportunities to implement best practices for identifying, screening, and responding to IPV in clinical practice settings, including interprofessional strategies that engage professionals from social work, law, nursing, dentistry, and medicine.

Class Deals by MOOC List - Click here and see EdX's Active Discounts, Deals, and Promo Codes.

Intimate partner violence (IPV), also commonly referred to as domestic violence, is a significant public health issue in the U.S., which has persisted despite extensive efforts to eradicate it through numerous policy and practice interventions. In this course, learners will be introduced to key concepts, definitions, and theories of IPV from public health, social justice, and legal perspectives. Learners will also receive applied learning opportunities to implement best practices for identifying, screening, and responding to IPV in clinical practice settings, including interprofessional strategies that engage professionals from social work, law, nursing, dentistry, and medicine. Issues related to those who experience and witness IPV as well as those who use violence will be discussed, including cultural factors and social inequalities that perpetuate IPV as they relate to age, gender and gender identity, race, ethnicity, immigration status, socioeconomic status, and sexual orientation. Course activities will be designed to help learners think critically and implement theory-driven practices for identification, screening, and response to IPV across multiple levels of intervention (e.g., individual, family, and community) and within the clinical settings of social work, law, nursing, dentistry, and medicine.

What you'll learn
In this course, you will learn to:

  • Describe the prevalence of IPV and the impact of such violence on victims.
  • Explain how power dynamics and intersectionality affect personal experiences of IPV.
  • Describe the range of possibilities for interprofessional care in response to IPV.
  • Perform appropriate screening, assessment, and interprofessional intervention strategies for IPV.
  • Explain the purpose and considerations of a safety plan, including legal, healthcare, and community resources for victims/survivors of IPV.
  • Identify ways professionals can support person-centered responses to IPV.
  • Recognize the vulnerability, unique risks, and challenges underserved populations face.
  • Demonstrate cultural humility when responding to populations affected by IPV.
  • Describe primary, secondary, and tertiary IPV prevention strategies used to affect change across the social ecology.
  • Analyze your role in working interprofessionally to prevent IPV.
Go to Class
MOOC List is learner-supported. When you buy through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.

Related Courses

Writing for Social Justice (edX) EdX
University of California, Berkeley,BerkeleyX

Writing for Social Justice (edX)

Learn to harness the power of writing to bring about about personal, social, and political changes that matter. Can writing change your world? Writing with power about personal, social, and political issues can change minds, introduce solutions to old problems, and help you become a more engaged participant in public life.

Self Paced
Self-Paced
A History of Violence: From the Middle Ages to Modern Times (edX) EdX
The University of Newcastle, Australia

A History of Violence: From the Middle Ages to Modern Times (edX)

Examine the origins, changing nature, uses, and attitudes towards human violence in western history. What is violence? What do we mean by it? Is it innate or learned? Are we becoming more or less violent? These are all questions that we will ask throughout this course. A History of Violence will examine the different types of violence that humans have practiced over the centuries, put them into historical context, and try to understand why those different forms of violence are used at particular times, and not others; why some kinds of violence are accepted in some parts of the world but not others?

No sessions available
5-12 Weeks
Systems Science and Obesity (Coursera) Coursera
Johns Hopkins University

Systems Science and Obesity (Coursera)

Systems science has been instrumental in breaking new scientific ground in diverse fields such as meteorology, engineering and decision analysis. However, it is just beginning to impact public health. This seminar is designed to introduce students to basic tools of theory building and data analysis in systems science and to apply those tools to better understand the obesity epidemic in human populations.

Jun 1st 2026
4 Weeks
Religion, Conflict and Peace (edX) EdX
HarvardX,Harvard University

Religion, Conflict and Peace (edX)

Explore the diverse and complex roles that religions play in both promoting and mitigating violence. In this course, we will explore a series of contemporary conflicts in different regions of the world with a special focus on identifying and analyzing the diverse and complex roles that religions play in both promoting and mitigating violence in each context.

Self Paced
Self-Paced
Global Health: Ebola, COVID, and Beyond (edX) EdX
University System of Maryland - USM,USMx,University of Maryland, Baltimore,University of Maryland Global Campus - UMGC,UMB,UMGC

Global Health: Ebola, COVID, and Beyond (edX)

Become part of the global health community and prepare yourself to join teams providing care. This introductory course, first delivered in September 2016, explores how multidisciplinary teams can work more effectively together to address global health needs. Whether you seek a career in international health or medicine, volunteer to serve those less fortunate, or work in an institutional setting such as a clinic, hospital, or public health agency, it is important to understand the sources and movement of diseases.

No sessions available
5-12 Weeks
Global Public Health (edX) EdX
SDGAcademyX,SDG Academy

Global Public Health (edX)

Understanding the value of health not just as a benefit or right of individuals, but as a global public need. What are the effects of a healthy individual on the world around them? Beyond the hereditary connections between parents and children or the implications of communicable diseases, public health has intrinsic value as a basic human right. Furthermore, health and the three pillars of sustainable development i.e. economic, social and environmental well-being, are intrinsically connected.

Self Paced
Self-Paced
Evolutionary Medicine: Microbes, Medicine, and Humanity's Quest for Survival (edX) EdX
Arizona State University,ASUx

Evolutionary Medicine: Microbes, Medicine, and Humanity's Quest for Survival (edX)

Explore the complex relationships between people, pathogens, and our evolutionary past in the first MOOC on evolutionary medicine. Have you ever wondered why we often develop a fever when we get sick? Or a cough? Why do we get cancer? Or the flu? Or allergies? Why do our bodies succumb to disease at all? In this class, we’ll answer these questions by taking a step back in time to consider how our evolutionary past has shaped our health in the present.

This course is archived
4 Weeks
Injury Prevention for Children & Teens (edX) EdX
University of Michigan,MichiganX

Injury Prevention for Children & Teens (edX)

Injuries are the #1 cause of death among children and teens. This course lays a foundation for the prevention of child and teen injuries. Injuries, such as motor vehicle crash, youth violence, and suicide, are the leading cause of child and adolescent death. However, almost all of these injuries can be prevented through the widespread application of evidence-based practices and policies.

Self Paced
Self-Paced