Pregnancy and Intimate Partner Violence in Canada: a Comparison of Victims Who Were and Were Not Abused During Pregnancy

The purpose of this study was to examine risk factors, indicators of severity, and differences in post-violence health effects for victims who experienced intimate partner violence (IPV) during pregnancy compared to victims who experienced IPV outside the pregnancy period. Data were from Statistics...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of family violence 2016-07, Vol.31 (5), p.567-579
Hauptverfasser: Taillieu, Tamara L., Brownridge, Douglas A., Tyler, Kimberly A., Chan, Ko Ling, Tiwari, Agnes, Santos, Susy C.
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container_end_page 579
container_issue 5
container_start_page 567
container_title Journal of family violence
container_volume 31
creator Taillieu, Tamara L.
Brownridge, Douglas A.
Tyler, Kimberly A.
Chan, Ko Ling
Tiwari, Agnes
Santos, Susy C.
description The purpose of this study was to examine risk factors, indicators of severity, and differences in post-violence health effects for victims who experienced intimate partner violence (IPV) during pregnancy compared to victims who experienced IPV outside the pregnancy period. Data were from Statistics Canada’s 2009 General Social Survey. Among IPV victims, 10.5 % experienced physical and/or sexual violence during pregnancy. Victims who had experienced violence during pregnancy were more likely than victims who were not abused during pregnancy to experience both less severe and more severe forms of violence. In fully adjusted models, younger age, separated or divorced marital status, as well as partners’ patriarchal domination, destruction of property, and drinking were significant predictors of pregnancy violence. Measures indicative of more severe violence and of a number of adverse post-violence health effects were significantly elevated among victims who experienced pregnancy violence relative to victims who were not abused during pregnancy. Implications of these findings are discussed.
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subjects Abuse
Clinical Psychology
Criminology and Criminal Justice
Destruction
Domestic violence
Dominance
Health
Intimate partner violence
Law and Psychology
Marital status
Medicine
Medicine & Public Health
Original Article
Pregnancy
Property
Psychotherapy and Counseling
Quality of Life Research
Risk
Risk factors
Severity
Sex crimes
Sexual violence
Victims
title Pregnancy and Intimate Partner Violence in Canada: a Comparison of Victims Who Were and Were Not Abused During Pregnancy
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