Skip to content Accessibility statement

New scheme provides early escape route for victims of domestic violence, study shows

News

Posted on Wednesday 27 January 2021

Survivors of domestic violence are being given a better route out of abuse through an innovative early intervention scheme, a new study shows.
The scheme also helped reduce associated housing management issues, such as rent arrears, eviction and homelessness triggered by domestic abuse.

The report - by the University of York – studied how the Accreditation scheme run by the Domestic Abuse Housing Alliance (DAHA) improved the level of support given to domestic abuse victims by staff.

The scheme ensures that staff working for social housing organisations were better trained and more confident in being able to detect early signs of domestic abuse.

Findings included:

  • Women who had experienced domestic abuse reported feeling safe and supported once they were using the services.
  • The levels of support exceeded what several women expected to be available to someone experiencing domestic abuse.
  • Housing management staff were seen as responding sensitively and positively.
  • The scheme also helped reduce associated housing management issues, such as rent arrears, eviction, nuisance and homelessness triggered by domestic abuse.

Dr Joanne Bretherton, of the Centre for Housing Policy which is part of the Department of Social Policy and Social Work said: “There are longstanding issues with the inadequacy of the response to domestic abuse across society.  Abuse goes undetected and existing systems are often overwhelmed. The distress, misery and trauma caused by domestic abuse exists at an enormous  scale.

“By detecting and responding to domestic abuse more quickly and effectively, identifying signs earlier and taking actions that improve safety and housing outcomes for survivors, including their children, DAHA accreditation is designed to deliver multiple benefits to health and wellbeing.”

Abuse

The study also showed that emotional support was seen as one of the most important elements of the help provided by services, although the practical aspects of support, such as help moving home when necessary, were also highly valued.

Researchers conducted indepth interviews with survivors of abuse and staff at two housing organisations in London and the north east between 2018 and 2020.

The report concluded that the DAHA Accreditation appeared to generate a sense of confidence at multiple levels. For women experiencing domestic abuse, the scheme gave them the emotional and practical support they needed and brought a sense of greater self-confidence.

For the housing providers, there was a sense that the scheme created a clear and coherent strategy and that a proper response to domestic abuse was in place. Individual staff also felt clearer about what to look for in relation to domestic abuse and that there were clear systems that they knew how to use when they found it.

Trauma

Researchers also said that the scheme could help reduce the high financial costs of domestic violence by reducing long-term and repeated homelessness and the wider harm caused by domestic abuse.

A 2019 estimate produced for the Home Office estimated an equivalent cost of £66 billion over the course of 2016/17, including the impacts of physical and mental trauma on people experiencing domestic abuse. 

DAHA is a partnership founded in 2014 between three agencies, including two housing providers Gentoo Group and Peabody and a domestic abuse service Standing Together Against Domestic Violence(STADV).  The DAHA Accreditation scheme is currently being used by 20 housing providers.

Research newsletter

Our monthly research newsletter features a curated mix of news, events, and recent discoveries delivered straight to your inbox.

Sign up

Explore more news

News

8 May 2026

University of York students contributed more than 90,000 hours of service to the City over the last year, providing a vital economic and social boost to the region.

News

5 May 2026

Researchers are transforming access to some of the world’s oldest written records using digital technology and multilingual tools.

News

5 May 2026

Two leading academics are preparing to take up secondments to the University of York Mumbai to establish new partnerships and support new degree programmes.

News

30 April 2026

Scientists have shown that evolution has been using the same genetic ‘cheat sheet’ for over 120 million years, suggesting that life on earth may be more predictable than first imagined.

News

30 April 2026

Two infants buried in Roman York were laid to rest in costly purple cloth normally reserved for emperors and members of the aristocracy, new research reveals

Read more news