Abstract
OBJECTIVES: to report the implementation of supervision for healthcare professionals from Violence Prevention Centers in healthcare services in two regions of the city of São Paulo, Brazil. METHODS: an experience report of planning and executing supervision meetings from the perspective of critical-emancipatory education. RESULTS: twenty meetings were held with critical reflections on domestic and gender-based violence as a barrier to continuity of life and the need to make the phenomenon visible and take it into account when planning healthcare. FINAL CONSIDERATIONS: the experience offers a practical perspective on supervising health workers that is consistent with maintaining ongoing education and health surveillance to improve the way domestic and gender-based violence is addressed in healthcare services.