Questions such as these blame the victim. It isn't being "tough, unfair, or mean"- it's being ignorant. It is a huge factor in the ability of an aggressor to maintain control and fear. In fact, this prevailing attitude about victims of domestic violence makes it so much harder to get out of the situation. Seriously, who wants to put themselves out there to get help when the response is "you're an idiot for allowing it."? If the OP's past experience with this is brought up in the admission process, s/he should call bullsh*t on any inference that s/he was willing to accept this treatment or should have done more to get away from it.
To the OP: Empower yourself with facts. Get involved in your local intimate partner/domestic violence outreach. Not only will it be personally beneficial to you, and of course those you serve, but it will also demonstrate to adcoms how you can take a tragic situation that was out of your control and use it to help you make a positive change in your life and others. Presenting a good outcome is better than explaining why your past experience has caused academic hardship for you.
The ONLY individual in an abusive situation that the victim can CHANGE is the person being abused. NONE of us can EVER change anyone else. The only actions and behaviors anyone can control are our own. I am not blaming... I am not saying she/he deserved it or asked for it. I am saying that we all make choices, and when one is an adult, they have to decide what they will and will not accept from other people, including thier parents. It is horrible, I get that. I understand. I chose to walk away from alcoholism and abuse, even when it meant working insane hours while attending school full time. Even when it meant living out of my car (an old beater I bought myself) for the better part of a year. I know how hard it is. I walked away from my late husband's family right after my husband died (widow at 22) when my brother-in-law told me I deserved to be assaulted. Specifically, he said that any woman who went traipsing around the world (I was part of a team that provided medical care in hill tribe villages in thailand) deserved to be raped. I do not believe I deserved any of that, and I don't believe the OP deserved it either, but it is very true that we are the only people who can decide how to conduct our own lives, and that includes making extremly difficult decisions, including whether or not to tolerate abuse.
My point is very true: EVERYTHING you put on your application is fair game to question and challenge. And the questioning does NOT have to be fair, or kind, or anything else. Ad coms are not out there to make our lives better, or help our dreams and goals come true. They are there to find individuals who will complete the program sucessfully, continue into the profession, and perform well in their chosen career. If an ad com does not believe someone's past actions or experienes (when the individual raises the information in an appliction) are compatable with successful completion of the program, they have every reason to question the actions or experiences, and to use it to consider future performance. So, again, if the applicant brings it up, I firmly believe that it should be as a simple statement that does NOT offer unnecessary information, points to when a resolution occured, and highlights the evidence of sucess after resolution. That is true whether we are talking about abuse, medical or psychological issues, or anything else that can cast an applicant or his or her past in a negative light. Unless this experience is what brought the OP to medicine, and they can illustrate that in a way that is positive, it isn' worth mentioning.
Oh, and as
ignorant as you consider me, we have housed 7 individuals escaping domestic abuse in the past 3 years, including their children. No charge, no compensation from any organization. We are also foster parents who accept (priority) adolescents and teens removed from homes for domestic violence. If you want to judge me, I hope your willing to take over these tasks; obviously you would be far better at assisting these families. I ask way too much; I ask these individuals to take the help available and embrace thier own power to decide what their future holds, rather than accepting the life put on them by another. I will never stop anyone who choses to return to an abuser, but it is a choice that ony that indiviual can make, and they do need to know for themselves why they return. I would be happy to send the next person in distress to you, we can always use more safe homes; many come into the system with only what they could easily carry.