What's very important to understand is that it takes a lot of courage for women to file a complaint. If, from the very first moments of disclosure, they are welcomed into a structure that understands what coercive control is, they'll be able to move forward. Their greatest fear, when they reveal what they've experienced, is that they won't be believed.
If the training of police and judicial stakeholders was focused on recognizing coercive control, then I'd be able to say that, despite all their fears when it comes to disclosing their experiences, women could be accompanied and assured that they would be heard and believed. Women's greatest fear is that they won't be believed and that their whole experience and the violence they've suffered won't be taken into account.