There was a moderate effect of treatment on
physical violence victimization in the expected direction at all four follow - up waves regardless of conditions at baseline, indicating both primary and secondary prevention effects.
There was a moderate effect of treatment on
physical violence victimization.
Parallel questions were used to measure moderate physical abuse victimization, severe
physical violence victimization and sexual dating violence.
Poor family functioning predicted
physical violence victimization in both male and female suicidal inpatients, even after controlling for alcohol use and demographic characteristics.
Not exact matches
The effects of child sexual abuse include increased risk for development of severe mental,
physical and behavioral health disorders; sexually transmitted diseases; self - inflicted injury, substance abuse and
violence; and subsequent
victimization and criminal offending.
A review of twenty studies on the adult lives of antisocial adolescent girls found higher mortality rates, a variety of psychiatric problems, dysfunctional and violent relationships, poor educational achievement, and less stable work histories than among non-delinquent girls.23 Chronic problem behavior during childhood has been linked with alcohol and drug abuse in adulthood, as well as with other mental health problems and disorders, such as emotional disturbance and depression.24 David Hawkins, Richard Catalano, and Janet Miller have shown a similar link between conduct disorder among girls and adult substance abuse.25 Terrie Moffitt and several colleagues found that girls diagnosed with conduct disorder were more likely as adults to suffer from a wide variety of problems than girls without such a diagnosis.26 Among the problems were poorer
physical health and more symptoms of mental illness, reliance on social assistance, and
victimization by, as well as
violence toward, partners.
Types of Adolescent Exposure to
Violence as Predictors of Adult Intimate Partner Violence Menard, Weiss, Franzese, & Covey (2014) Child Abuse and Neglect, 38 (4) View Abstract Examines the relationship of adolescent physical abuse victimization, witnessing parental violence, and adolescent exposure to violence in the community to the perpetration of and victimization by IPV in mid
Violence as Predictors of Adult Intimate Partner
Violence Menard, Weiss, Franzese, & Covey (2014) Child Abuse and Neglect, 38 (4) View Abstract Examines the relationship of adolescent physical abuse victimization, witnessing parental violence, and adolescent exposure to violence in the community to the perpetration of and victimization by IPV in mid
Violence Menard, Weiss, Franzese, & Covey (2014) Child Abuse and Neglect, 38 (4) View Abstract Examines the relationship of adolescent
physical abuse
victimization, witnessing parental
violence, and adolescent exposure to violence in the community to the perpetration of and victimization by IPV in mid
violence, and adolescent exposure to
violence in the community to the perpetration of and victimization by IPV in mid
violence in the community to the perpetration of and
victimization by IPV in middle age.
to stop or prevent the initiation of dating
violence victimization and perpetration, including the psychological,
physical, and sexual abuse that may occur between youths involved in a dating relationship
Safe Dates is a school - based prevention program for middle and high school students designed to stop or prevent the initiation of dating
violence victimization and perpetration, including the psychological,
physical, and sexual abuse that may occur between youths involved in a dating relationship.
The JVQ is a comprehensive instrument designed to screen for a wide range of
victimization events, covering such general areas of concern as
physical assault, property
victimization, child maltreatment, peer and sibling
victimization, sexual
victimization, witnessing
violence, and indirect exposure to
violence.12 Both surveys asked the same questions about 34 separate
victimization types and collected similar demographic and background information.
The aggregates are
physical assault, property
victimization, maltreatment, peer - sibling
victimization, sexual
victimization, sexual assault, witnessing family
violence, and exposure to community
violence.
I have worked with women, teens and children impacted by
physical abuse, domestic
violence, sexual abuse and secondary
victimization.
The present study suggests that this acceptance may have been premature... Results from this study indicate that the use of the IT / SCV typology does not consistently work better than a simple measure of the breadth of violent acts used by respondents» husbands to predict negative outcomes of partner
violence victimization... [and] both of these measurement strategies fail to examine the general effect of husbands» control... The preliminary empirical evidence reported here suggests that these victims of coercive control are an unrecognized category of victims... IPV researchers should focus on the dynamics of coercive control in intimate abuse whether or not this control occurs in the context of
physical violence.
In a large community study (n = 2,947) 58 % of women who reported being the victim of severe
physical violence from their partners also reported elevated depressive symptomatology compared to only 21 % who reported no partner
physical victimization (Stets and Straus 1990).
A sample of 550 girls (mean age = 15) drawn from a larger representative community sample in Quebec, Canada, completed a questionnaire on three forms of dating
violence victimization (psychological,
physical, and sexual).