Effects of a Home Visiting Program on Parenting: Mediating Role of Intimate Partner Violence

Young women aged 18 to 24 years are in the highest risk group for intimate partner violence (IPV), and adolescent mothers are at particularly high risk for IPV and for risky health behaviors. Exposure to IPV may contribute to parenting stress and risky behaviors, and may compromise parenting behavio...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of interpersonal violence 2021-01, Vol.36 (1-2), p.NP803-NP823
Hauptverfasser: Easterbrooks, M. Ann, Fauth, Rebecca C., Lamoreau, Renee
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container_end_page NP823
container_issue 1-2
container_start_page NP803
container_title Journal of interpersonal violence
container_volume 36
creator Easterbrooks, M. Ann
Fauth, Rebecca C.
Lamoreau, Renee
description Young women aged 18 to 24 years are in the highest risk group for intimate partner violence (IPV), and adolescent mothers are at particularly high risk for IPV and for risky health behaviors. Exposure to IPV may contribute to parenting stress and risky behaviors, and may compromise parenting behavior and healthy child development. The present study examined whether program effects of a statewide home visiting program for adolescent parents on young mothers’ parenting stress and risky behaviors measured 2 years post program enrollment were mediated by program effects on their exposure to IPV measured 1 year post enrollment. Using longitudinal data from a subsample of young mothers (n = 448; 58% program, 42% control) who participated in a randomized controlled trial evaluation of a statewide home visiting program, Healthy Families Massachusetts (HFM), we estimated path analyses to examine whether home visiting program effects observed on IPV mediated home visiting program effects on subsequent assessments of parenting distress and mothers’ risky behaviors. Findings indicated that IPV mediated associations between home visiting program effects on mothers’ parenting distress and risky behavior. Although most newborn home visiting programs do not have an explicitly stated goal of reducing IPV, helping mothers and their partners to reduce violent behavior can have further-reaching impacts on other key goals of home visiting programs, such as parenting stress and risky behaviors.
doi_str_mv 10.1177/0886260517736879
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source SAGE Journals Online; Sociological Abstracts
subjects Adolescent mothers
Adolescent parents
Behavior
Child development
Childrearing practices
Domestic violence
Female roles
Health behavior
Health visiting
Home health care
Intimate partner violence
Psychological distress
Randomized Controlled Trials
Stress
Teenage parents
Young mothers
Young women
title Effects of a Home Visiting Program on Parenting: Mediating Role of Intimate Partner Violence
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