| Literature DB >> 22973507 |
Sepali Guruge1, Marilyn Ford-Gilboe, Joan Samuels-Dennis, Colleen Varcoe, Piotr Wilk, Judith Wuest.
Abstract
Relationships have both positive and negative dimensions, yet most research in the area of intimate partner violence (IPV) has focused on social support, and not on social conflict. Based on the data from 309 English-speaking Canadian women who experienced IPV in the past 3 years and were no longer living with the abuser, we tested four hypotheses examining the relationships among severity of past IPV and women's social support, social conflict, and health. We found that the severity of past IPV exerted direct negative effects on women's health. Similarly, both social support and social conflict directly influenced women's health. Social conflict, but not social support, mediated the relationships between IPV severity and health. Finally, social conflict moderated the relationships between social support and women's health, such that the positive effects of social support were attenuated in the presence of high levels of social conflict. These findings highlight that routine assessments of social support and social conflict and the use of strategies to help women enhance support and reduce conflict in their relationships are essential aspects of nursing care.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22973507 PMCID: PMC3438734 DOI: 10.1155/2012/738905
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nurs Res Pract ISSN: 2090-1429
Figure 1Conceptual model of hypothesized relationships among IPV severity, social support, social conflict and women's health.
Demographic characteristics and abuse histories of study participants (N = 309).
| Variable | Range | Mean | SD | % of |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| ||||
| Age | 19–63 | 39.4 | 9.8 | |
| Education (in years) | 6–22 | 13.4 | 2.6 | |
| Annual income | 0–95,000 | 15,695 | 20,391 | |
| Employed | 45.1% | |||
| Receiving social assistance | 31.4% | |||
| Disability benefit | 10.4% | |||
| Living with children (<18 years) | 57.0% | |||
| Racialized | 16.8% | |||
| Aboriginal | 7.4% | |||
| First language english | 92.4% | |||
|
| ||||
| Duration of IPV (in years) | 0.25–37 | 8.5 | 7.8 | |
| Time since separation (months) | 3–40.5 | 20.1 | 10.2 | |
| Past month harassment | 50% | |||
| >1 abusive partner | 59% | |||
| Abused as a child | 81% |
Means, standard deviations and ranges of study indicators (N = 309).
| Indicator (measure) | Mean | SD | Range |
|---|---|---|---|
| Severity of physical IPV (ISA-P)1 | 48.6 | 23.47 | 7.2–100 |
| Severity of nonphysical IPV (ISA-NP)2 | 65.4 | 18.63 | 18.5–100 |
| Women's Responses to abuse (WEB)3 | 53.3 | 7.00 | 21–60 |
| Social support (IPRI4-support scale) | 51.6 | 10.27 | 16–65 |
| Social conflict (IPRI4-conflict scale) | 42.0 | 11.59 | 13–65 |
| General physical health (SF12v2) | 45.3 | 12.76 | 14.4–68.7 |
| Chronic pain intensity | 49.0 | 25.80 | 0–100 |
| Gastrointestinal symptom frequency (PASS5-GI scale) | 0.98 | 0.88 | 0–4 |
| General mental health (SF12v2) | 36.8 | 12.70 | 2.7–64.4 |
| Depressive symptom severity (CES-D)6 | 25.2 | 13.03 | 0–54.7 |
| PTSD symptomology (DTS)7 | 47.5 | 30.78 | 0–125 |
1ISA-P: Index of Spouse Abuse physical scale.
2ISA-NP: Index of Spouse Abuse nonphysical abuse scale.
3WEB: Women's Experiences of Battering.
4IPRI: InterPersonal Relationship Inventory.
5PASS: Partner Abuse Symptom Scale, gastrointestinal scale.
6CESD: Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression scale.
7DTS: Davidson Trauma Scale.
Figure 2Results of testing the double mediator model (N = 309).
Figure 3Effects of social support on health for high and low social conflict groups (N = 309).