Literature DB >> 12604764

Neighborhood environment, racial position, and risk of police-reported domestic violence: a contextual analysis.

Deborah N Pearlman1, Sally Zierler, Annie Gjelsvik, Wendy Verhoek-Oftedahl.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: The purpose of this study was to examine the contribution of neighborhood socioeconomic conditions to risk of police-reported domestic violence in relation to victim's race. Data on race came from police forms legally mandated for the reporting of domestic violence and sexual assault.
METHODS: Using 1990 U.S. census block group data and data for the years 1996-1998 from Rhode Island's domestic violence surveillance system, the authors generated annual and relative risk of police-reported domestic violence and estimates of trends stratified by age, race (black, Hispanic, or white), and neighborhood measures of socioeconomic conditions. Race-specific linear regression models were constructed with average annual risk of police-reported domestic violence as the dependent variable.
RESULTS: Across all levels of neighborhood poverty (< 5% to 100% of residents living below the federal poverty level), the risk of police-reported domestic violence was higher for Hispanic and black women than for white women. Results from the linear regression models varied by race. For black women, living in a census block group in which fewer than 10% of adults ages > or = 25 years were college-educated contributed independently to risk of police-reported domestic violence. Block group measures of relative poverty (> or = 20% of residents living below 200% of the poverty line) and unemployment (> or = 10% of adults ages > or = 16 years in the labor force but unemployed) did not add to this excess. For Hispanic women, three neighborhood-level measures were significant: percentage of residents living in relative poverty, percentage of residents without college degrees, and percentage of households monolingual in Spanish. A higher degree of linguistic isolation, as defined by the percentage of monolingual Spanish households, decreased risk among the most isolated block groups for Hispanic women. For white women, neighborhood-level measures of poverty, unemployment, and education were significant determinants of police-reported domestic violence.
CONCLUSION: When data on neighborhood conditions at the block group level and their interaction with individual racial position are linked to population-based surveillance systems, domestic violence intervention and prevention efforts can be improved.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  2003        PMID: 12604764      PMCID: PMC1497500          DOI: 10.1093/phr/118.1.44

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Public Health Rep        ISSN: 0033-3549            Impact factor:   2.792


  28 in total

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2.  Uncovering neighbourhood influences on intimate partner violence using concept mapping.

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6.  Neighborhood influences and intimate partner violence: does geographic setting matter?

Authors:  Jessica Griffin Burke; Patricia O'Campo; Geri L Peak
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7.  Depressive and posttraumatic symptoms among women seeking protection orders against intimate partners: relations to coping strategies and perceived responses to abuse disclosure.

Authors:  Sharon M Flicker; Catherine Cerulli; Marc T Swogger; Nancy L Talbot
Journal:  Violence Against Women       Date:  2012-06-26

8.  Neighborhood context and Black heterosexual men's sexual HIV risk behaviors.

Authors:  Lisa Bowleg; Torsten B Neilands; Loni Philip Tabb; Gary J Burkholder; David J Malebranche; Jeanne M Tschann
Journal:  AIDS Behav       Date:  2014-11

9.  Urban young women's experiences of discrimination and community violence and intimate partner violence.

Authors:  Ann Stueve; Lydia O'Donnell
Journal:  J Urban Health       Date:  2008-03-18       Impact factor: 3.671

10.  Racial and ethnic disparities in police-reported intimate partner violence and risk of hospitalization among women.

Authors:  Sherry Lipsky; Raul Caetano; Peter Roy-Byrne
Journal:  Womens Health Issues       Date:  2009 Mar-Apr
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