| Literature DB >> 30904864 |
Alexa R Yakubovich1, Jon Heron2, Gene Feder2, Abigail Fraser2, David K Humphreys1,3.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To evaluate the psychometric properties of a novel, brief measure of physical, psychological and sexual intimate partner violence (IPV) and estimate the overall prevalence of and gender differences in this violence.Entities:
Keywords: epidemiology; mental health; public health; social medicine
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30904864 PMCID: PMC6475136 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-025621
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
IPV victimisation and impact items
| Order | Victimisation items: How often altogether have any of your partners ever done any of the following to you and how old were you? | Type of IPV |
| 1 | Told you who you could see and where you could go and/or regularly checked what you were doing and where you were (by phone or text)? | Psychological |
| 2 | Made fun of you, called your hurtful names, shouted at you? | Psychological |
| 3 | Used physical force such as pushing, slapping, hitting or holding you down? | Physical |
| 4 | Used more severe physical force such as punching, strangling, beating you up, hitting you with an object? | Physical |
| 5 | Pressured you into kissing/touching/something else? | Sexual/psychological |
| 6 | Physically forced you into kissing/touching/something else? | Sexual |
| 7 | Pressured you into having sexual intercourse? | Sexual/psychological |
| 8 | Physically forced you into having sexual intercourse? | Sexual |
For each victimisation item, participants indicate the frequency of occurrence—where 0=never, 1=once, 2=a few times, 3=often—and age of occurrence, where 1=under 18, 2=over 18, 3=both. The question prompt included the following definition for partner: ‘By partner we mean anyone you have ever been out with or had a relationship with, long term or short term (including one night stands)’. For each impact item, participants indicated ‘yes’ or ‘no’ as to whether this is how the IPV they experienced affected them.
*This item was asked along with the victimisation items and was therefore measured on the ‘frequency’ response scale.
IPV, intimate partner violence.
Sociodemographic characteristics of the sample by gender
| Women | Men | |
|
| ||
| Ethnicity | ||
| Non-white | 134 (3.64) | 138 (3.74) |
| White | 3545 (96.36) | 3552 (96.26) |
| At least one parent had higher than O-level education | ||
| Yes | 3224 (55.29) | 3400 (54.76) |
| No | 2607 (44.71) | 2809 (45.24) |
| At least one parent part of lower social class (partly or unskilled occupation) | ||
| Yes | 1150 (23.76) | 1167 (22.87) |
| No (Both parents in professional, managerial or skilled occupations) | 3690 (76.24) | 3936 (77.13) |
| Mother married | ||
| Yes | 4807 (75.30) | 5100 (74.53) |
| No | 1577 (24.70) | 1743 (25.47) |
| Lived with both biological parents | ||
| Yes | 4489 (90.29) | 4830 (90.26) |
| No | 483 (9.71) | 521 (9.74) |
Frequencies of 8 intimate partner violence (IPV) victimisation and impact items
| Victimisation items | Total N | N (%) | |||
| Never | Once | A few times | Often | ||
| Told you who you could see and where you could go and/or regularly checked what you were doing and where you were (by phone or text) | 3268 | 2544 (77.85) | 124 (3.79) | 322 (12.91) | 178 (5.45) |
| Made fun of you, called you hurtful names, shouted at you | 3253 | 2422 (74.45) | 170 (5.23) | 530 (16.29) | 131 (4.03) |
| Used physical force such as pushing, slapping, hitting or holding you down | 3255 | 2768 (85.04) | 193 (5.93) | 235 (7.22) | 59 (1.81) |
| Used more severe physical force such as punching, strangling, beating you up, hitting you with an object | 3252 | 3075 (94.56) | 81 (2.49) | 68 (2.09) | 28 (0.86) |
| Pressured you into kissing/touching/something else | 3255 | 2981 (96.58) | 96 (2.95) | 146 (4.49) | 32 (0.98) |
| Physically forced you into kissing/touching/something else | 3250 | 3115 (95.85) | 68 (2.09) | 49 (1.51) | 18 (0.55) |
| Pressured you into having sexual intercourse | 3242 | 2876 (88.71) | 181 (5.58) | 152 (4.69) | 33 (1.02) |
| Physically forced you into having sexual intercourse | 3239 | 3118 (96.26) | 80 (2.47) | 32 (0.99) | 9 (0.28) |
Gender differences in IPV victimisation and impact items
| Victimisation items | Lifetime | Ages 18–21 | ||||
| Women (n=2050) | Men | χ2 (p value) | Women (n=2014) | Men (n=1092) | χ2 (p value) | |
| Told you who you could see, where you could go or regularly checked what you were doing and where you were | 510 (24.88) | 196 (17.69) | 21.41 (<0.001) | 346 (17.18) | 152 (13.92) | 5.59 (.018) |
| Made fun of you, called you hurtful names, shouted at you | 596 (29.07) | 210 (18.95) | 38.75 (<0.001) | 443 (22.00) | 166 (15.20) | 20.74 (<0.001) |
| Used physical force such as pushing, slapping, hitting or holding you down | 362 (17.66) | 106 (9.57) | 37.31 (<0.001) | 245 (12.16) | 82 (7.51) | 16.29 (<0.001) |
| Used more severe physical force such as punching, strangling, beating you up, hitting you with an object | 142 (6.93) | 31 (2.80) | 23.68 (<0.001) | 96 (4.77) | 22 (2.01) | 14.67 (<0.001) |
| Pressured you into kissing/touching/something else | 240 (11.71) | 26 (2.35) | 81.70 (<0.001) | 144 (7.15) | 20 (1.83) | 40.05 (<0.001) |
| Physically forced you into kissing/touching/something else | 125 (6.10) | 7 (0.63) | 53.65 (<0.001) | 72 (3.57) | 5 (0.46) | 28.46 (<0.001) |
| Pressured you into having sexual intercourse | 313 (15.27) | 43 (3.88) | 93.25 (<0.001) | 192 (9.53) | 36 (3.30) | 40.49 (<0.001) |
| Physically forced you into having sexual intercourse | 114 (5.56) | 5 (0.45) | 51.79 (<0.001) | 64 (3.18) | 5 (0.46) | 24.12 (<0.001) |
Victimisation items were coded as 1=experienced at least once, 0=never experienced. Impact items were 1=yes, 0=no.
IPV, intimate partner violence.
Summary statistics for comparisons between women and men on overall IPV victimisation and impact
| Item | Lifetime | Ages 18–21 | ||||||||||
| Women | Men | Women | Men | |||||||||
| N | M (SD) or N (%) | N | M (SD) or N (%) | t(df) or χ2 | P value | N | M (SD) or N (%) | N | M (SD) or N (%) | t(df) or χ2 | P value | |
| Mean frequency of IPV experiences (SD) | 2128 | 0.28 (0.50) | 1145 | 0.12 (0.25) | 12.61 (3252.18) | <0.001 | 2128 | 0.19 (0.39) | 1145 | 0.10 (0.24) | 7.58 (3219.11) | <0.001 |
| Mean no of IPV acts experienced (SD) | 2024 | 1.41 (2.19) | 1096 | 0.60 (1.22) | 13.16 (3115.22) | <0.001 | 2014 | 0.75 (1.47) | 1092 | 0.42 (0.97) | 7.55 (2996.44) | <0.001 |
| Any IPV (N, %) | 2128 | 884 (41.54) | 1145 | 330 (28.82) | 51.62 | <0.001 | 2128 | 683 (32.10) | 1145 | 275 (24.02) | 23.47 | <0.001 |
| Any IPV with a negative impact (N, %) | 2126 | 788 (37.06) | 1144 | 236 (20.63) | 93.41 | <0.001 | 2126 | 608 (28.60) | 1145 | 200 (17.47) | 49.57 | <0.001 |
| Mean no of negative impacts of IPV (SD) | 800 | 4.39 (2.27) | 292 | 2.73 (2.21) | 10.75 (1090) | <0.001 | 746 | 3.21 (2.72) | 279 | 2.24 (2.24) | 5.77 (602.84) | <0.001 |
All t-tests were two-group t-tests with unequal variances, apart from ‘number of negative impacts of IPV’ for the overall sample, which did not have unequal variances between men and women (ie, Levene’s test was statistically non-significant).
IPV, intimate partner violence.