与物质有关的亲密伴侣暴力行为模式:来自每日日记研究的发现

IF 3.7 2区 医学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, CLINICAL
Melissa R. Schick , Ashley Clayton , Christopher D. Maxwell , Tami P. Sullivan
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引用次数: 0

摘要

之前的研究将物质使用与亲密伴侣暴力(IPV)行为联系起来,但物质使用模式在多大程度上影响IPV行为模式尚不清楚。方法从社区中招募经历过身体或反复心理IPV的女性(N = 216,年龄40.7 [SD = 13.1],黑人34.7%,白人26.9%),每天完成基于app的90天调查,报告其伴侣使用酒精、大麻和其他药物的情况,以及伴侣的心理、身体和性IPV实施情况。结果在伴侣使用(与不使用)任何物质的日子里,伴侣的IPV犯罪的可能性显著增加(OR = 2.25, 95% CI[1.89, 2.67])。物质使用模式(即单独使用酒精或大麻、酒精-大麻共同使用、其他药物使用)在是否区分有(或没有)IPV、单独的心理IPV、无性IPV的身体IPV(有或没有心理IPV)和性IPV(有或没有身体和心理IPV)的日子方面有所不同。在很大程度上,包括酒精在内的物质使用模式往往会增加当天IPV犯罪的几率。具体来说,单独饮酒增加了当天心理和身体IPV犯罪的几率,酒精和大麻的共同使用增加了当天身体和性IPV犯罪的几率。其他药物的使用增加了同日发生性IPV的几率。结论:研究结果表明,特定的药物使用模式增加了IPV实施的风险。这些模式可能代表高风险事件,可以通过及时干预措施来减少IPV,并支持在殴打者发明规划中针对酒精使用的努力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Patterns of substance-involved intimate partner violence perpetration: Findings from a daily diary study

Background

Previous work has linked substance use to intimate partner violence (IPV) perpetration, but the extent to which patterns of substance use influence patterns of IPV perpetration is unclear.

Methods

Women (N = 216, Mage = 40.7 years [SD = 13.1], 34.7 % Black, 26.9 % White) experiencing physical or repeated psychological IPV were recruited from the community and completed daily app-based surveys for 90 days, in which they reported their partner’s use of alcohol, cannabis, and other drugs, and their partner’s psychological, physical, and sexual IPV perpetration.

Results

Partner’s IPV perpetration was significantly more likely on days when partners used (versus did not use) any substances (OR = 2.25, 95 %CI [1.89, 2.67]). Substance use patterns (i.e., alcohol or cannabis use alone, alcohol-cannabis co-use, other drug use) varied with respect to whether they differentiated days with (versus without) IPV, psychological IPV alone, physical IPV without sexual IPV (with or without psychological IPV), and sexual IPV (with or without physical and psychological IPV). In large part, substance use patterns that included alcohol tended to increase the odds of same-day IPV perpetration. Specifically, alcohol use alone increased the odds of same-day psychological and physical IPV perpetration, and alcohol-cannabis co-use increased the odds of same-day physical and sexual IPV perpetration. Use of other drugs increased the odds of same-day sexual IPV perpetration.

Conclusions

Findings suggest particular patterns of substance use increased the risk of IPV perpetration. These patterns may represent higher-risk events that could be targeted by just-in-time interventions to reduce IPV, and support efforts targeting alcohol use in batterer invention programming.
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来源期刊
Addictive behaviors
Addictive behaviors 医学-药物滥用
CiteScore
8.40
自引率
4.50%
发文量
283
审稿时长
46 days
期刊介绍: Addictive Behaviors is an international peer-reviewed journal publishing high quality human research on addictive behaviors and disorders since 1975. The journal accepts submissions of full-length papers and short communications on substance-related addictions such as the abuse of alcohol, drugs and nicotine, and behavioral addictions involving gambling and technology. We primarily publish behavioral and psychosocial research but our articles span the fields of psychology, sociology, psychiatry, epidemiology, social policy, medicine, pharmacology and neuroscience. While theoretical orientations are diverse, the emphasis of the journal is primarily empirical. That is, sound experimental design combined with valid, reliable assessment and evaluation procedures are a requisite for acceptance. However, innovative and empirically oriented case studies that might encourage new lines of inquiry are accepted as well. Studies that clearly contribute to current knowledge of etiology, prevention, social policy or treatment are given priority. Scholarly commentaries on topical issues, systematic reviews, and mini reviews are encouraged. We especially welcome multimedia papers that incorporate video or audio components to better display methodology or findings. Studies can also be submitted to Addictive Behaviors? companion title, the open access journal Addictive Behaviors Reports, which has a particular interest in ''non-traditional'', innovative and empirically-oriented research such as negative/null data papers, replication studies, case reports on novel treatments, and cross-cultural research.
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