Results Several
types of child victimization were reported significantly less often in 2008 than in 2003: physical assaults, sexual assaults, and peer and sibling victimizations, including physical bullying.
Several
types of child victimization were reported significantly less often in 2008 than in 2003: physical assaults, sexual assaults, and peer and sibling victimizations, including physical bullying.
Not exact matches
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 middle age.
Using data collected to evaluate the Hawaii Healthy Start Program (same as Healthy Families America), the study estimated over two 3 - year intervals (during program implementation and over long - term follow - up) whether home visitation beginning after the birth
of a
child was associated with changes in (1) average rates
of mothers» IPV
victimization and perpetration and (2) rates
of specific IPV
types (physical assault, verbal abuse, sexual assault, and injury).
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.
Eight aggregate measures were constructed to represent each
child's overall experience within each domain, with each measure recording whether a
child had experienced any
victimization of that
type.
Results confirmed that
children who experienced any
type of family violence
victimization had higher mean externalizing behavior scores compared to
children with no history
of family violence; however, few differences in externalizing behavior scores were found as the number
of family violence
types increased.