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Being in financial stress means that the client is experiencing issues with their money or finances. For example finding:
An intimate partner refers to a person with whom one shares or shared a close personal relationship, characterised by emotional and physical intimacy, and where their lives are or were intertwined or dependent (financially, physically, emotionally). This can be current or former spouses or de facto partners. Intimate partners can be the same or opposite sex.
Intimate partner violence is any behaviour within an intimate relationship that causes physical, sexual, spiritual, or psychological harm.
Intimate partner violence can be:
Changing living arrangements could include: moving home, staying with a friend/family, staying at a refuge, remaining in the home when your partner has left or being made homeless.
A risk assessment involves talking with a support worker to identify the ways the person using violence has hurt or harmed you in the past and how likely you think they will try and hurt or harm you in the future. The support worker uses this information to work out what the person using violence may do in the future and how likely it is, and what supports you need to stay safe.
Safety planning is naming things you can do to be safer when living with violence or abuse.
An intimate partner refers to a person with whom one shares or shared a close personal relationship, characterised by emotional and physical intimacy, and where their lives are or were intertwined or dependent (financially, physically, emotionally). This can be current or former spouses or de facto partners. Intimate partners can be the same or opposite sex. Coercive control involves perpetrators using patterns of abusive behaviours over time in a way that creates fear and denies liberty and autonomy.
Intimate partner violence refers to any behaviour within an intimate relationship (current or previous) that causes physical, sexual or psychological harm. It also encompasses family, domestic and sexual violence which refers to: a) violence between two people who are, or were, in an intimate relationship; and/or b) violence between family members, family-like relationships or kinship relationships; and/or c) sexual actions without consent. These forms of violence include, but are not limited to physical, sexual, emotional, psychological and financial abuse, and coercive control.
For example: Finding it hard to pay your bills, can't access your own money, you are unable to afford to leave your violent relationship.
Changing living arrangements could include: moving home, staying with a friend/family, staying at a refuge, remaining in the home when your partner has left or being made homeless.