| Literature DB >> 33573515 |
Elisabeth Christie Ørke1, Stål Bjørkly1,2, Mariana Dufort3, Solveig Karin Bø Vatnar1,2.
Abstract
This cross-sectional study compared attachment characteristics among women victimized by intimate partner violence (IPV) in no, one, and multiple relationships (N = 154). Results indicated that compared with the nonvictimized, victimized women had increased likelihood of higher attachment avoidance. Compared with women victimized in one relationship, women victimized in multiple relationships had higher likelihood of higher attachment anxiety scores. Adjusting for childhood adversities, childhood sexual abuse was an independent risk factor for IPV. Childhood emotional abuse mediated the association between attachment anxiety and IPV victimization in multiple relationships in particular. Attachment theory appeared useful for better understanding women's vulnerability for multiple violent relationships.Entities:
Keywords: attachment; childhood emotional abuse; intimate partner violence (IPV); multiple partners (MP)
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33573515 PMCID: PMC8521374 DOI: 10.1177/1077801220981157
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Violence Against Women ISSN: 1077-8012
Sociodemographic and Contextual Group Differences Among Women With No (0IPVR), One (1IPVR), and Multiple IPV Relationships (2IPVR).
| Variable | 0IPVR ( | 1IPVR ( | 2IPVR ( | Total ( | 1IPVR + 2IPVR vs. 0IPVR | 1IPVR vs. 2IPVR |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| % ( | % ( | % ( | % ( |
|
| |
| Immigrant | 8.3 (4) | 25.5 (14) | 7.8 (4) | 14.3 (22) | .155 | .016 |
| Immigrant partner | 4.2 (2) | 40.0 (22) | 27.5 (14) | 24.7 (38) | <.001 | .173 |
| Work/income | .022 | .014 | ||||
| Employed | 77.1 (37) | 50.9 (28) | 41.2 (21) | 55.8 (86) | ||
| Student | 6.3 (3) | 12.7 (7) | 3.9 (2) | 7.8 (12) | ||
| Unemployed | 4.2 (2) | 10.9 (6) | 3.9 (2) | 6.5 (10) | ||
| Disability benefits | 4.2 (2) | 3.6 (2) | 23.5 (12) | 10.4 (16) | ||
| Retired | 2.1 (1) | 0.0 (0) | 2.0 (1) | 1.3 (2) | ||
| Other | 2.1 (1) | 9.1 (5) | 3.9 (2) | 5.2 (8) | ||
| Work assessment allowance | 4.2 (2) | 12.7 (7) | 21.6 (11) | 13.0 (20) | ||
| Mother | 97.9 (47) | 87.3 (48) | 86.3 (44) | 90.3 (139) | .031 | .879 |
| No confidants | 0.0 (0) | 9.3 (5) | 9.8 (5) | 6.5 (10) | .028 | .900 |
| Considers partner | 87.5 (42) | 81.8 (45) | 52.9 (27) | 74.0 (114) | .010 | .001 |
| Language challenges | 2.1 (1) | 18.2 (10) | 8.0 (4) | 9.8 (15) | .030 | .125 |
| Interpreter | 0.0 (0) | 9.1 (5) | 0.0 (0) | 3.2 (5) | .126 | .027 |
| Education (years) ( | 16/2.60 | 15.49/3.36 | 13.41/3.26 | 14.96/3.28 | <.001 | .002 |
| Length of relationship (years) ( | 14.48/9.24 | 10.83/8.86 | 6.42/6.50 | 10.51/8.85 | <.001 | .003 |
Note. The Mann–Whitney U test was used to test for possible group differences for variables with nonparametric score distributions for two independent groups. The Pearson chi-square test was used for nominal data and unrelated groups. Age, age of partner, age at the initiation of first intimate relationship, time lapse since last relationship, and whether the victimized was presently in a violent relationship were tested with nonsignificant results. IPVR = intimate partner violence relationship.
Mean Scores of Attachment Characteristics Among Women With No (0IPVR), One (1IPVR), and Multiple IPV Relationships (2IPVR), Measured by Experiences in Close Relationships.
| Variable | 0IPVR ( | 1IPVR ( | 2IPVR ( | TOTAL ( | 0IPVR vs. 1IPVR + 2IPVR | 1IPVR vs. 2IPVR |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
|
|
|
|
| |
| Anxiety | 3.32, 1.09 | 3.49, 1.10 | 3.92, 0.97 | 3.58, 1.08 | .048 | .041 |
| Avoidance | 2.46, 0.89 | 3.37, 1.14 | 3.77, 1.21 | 3.21, 1.21 | <.001 | .086 |
| Avoidance of closeness | 2.37, 1.03 | 3.20, 1.24 | 3.70, 1.40 | 3.10, 1.34 | <.001 | .059 |
| Uncomfortable with openness | 2.33, 1.04 | 3.18, 1.31 | 3.59, 1.47 | 3.04, 1.38 | <.001 | .137 |
| Separation frustration | 3.72, 1.25 | 3.76, 1.18 | 3.89, 1.11 | 3.79, 1.18 | .631 | .553 |
| Anxiety for abandonment | 3.26, 1.68 | 3.44, 1.61 | 4.16, 1.60 | 3.62, 1.67 | .071 | .025 |
| Frantic desire for closeness | 2.85, 1.30 | 3.18, 1.25 | 3.56, 1.16 | 3.20, 1.26 | .024 | .118 |
Note. Independent samples t-test. Range = 1–7. IPVR = intimate partner violence relationship.
Victimized (n = 105) Compared With Nonvictimized Women (Baseline) (n = 48) (Multivariate Logistic Regression Analyses).
| Independent variables | Adjusted odds ratio | 95% CI |
|
|---|---|---|---|
| Model 1 ( | |||
| Avoidance | 3.352 | [2.036, 5.517] | <.001 |
| Immigrant partner | 18.568 | [3.578, 96.373] | <.001 |
| Length of relationship | 0.993 | [0.989, 0.997] | <.001 |
| Model 2 ( | |||
| Avoidance of closeness | 2.214 | [1.525, 3.213] | <.001 |
| Immigrant partner | 13.502 | [2.794, 65.257] | .001 |
| Length of relationship | 0.994 | [0.990, 0.998] | .003 |
| Model 3a ( | |||
| Uncomfortable with openness | 2.700 | [1.741, 4.188] | <.001 |
| Immigrant partner | 20.502 | [3.977, 105.684] | <.001 |
| Length of relationship | 0.992 | [0.988, 0.996] | <.001 |
| Model 3b ( | |||
| Uncomfortable with openness | 2.656 | [1.697, 4.157] | <.001 |
| Childhood sexual abuse, prev. | 2.784 | [1.071, 7.236] | .036 |
| Immigrant partner | 22.494 | [4.215, 120.025] | <.001 |
| Length of relationship | 0.993 | [0.989, 0.997] | .001 |
| Peer victimization, freq. | ns | ||
Note. Multivariate logistic regression, forward stepwise (Wald). Model 1: Cox & Snell R2 = .347, Nagelkerke R2 = .486, Hosmer and Lemeshow test = .856. Model 2: Cox & Snell R2 = .294, Nagelkerke R2 = .412, Hosmer and Lemeshow test = .966. Model 3a Cox & Snell R2 = .324, Nagelkerke R2 = .454, Hosmer and Lemeshow test = .212. Model 3b: Cox & Snell R2 = .344, Nagelkerke R2 = .483, Hosmer and Lemeshow test = .149. Prev. = prevalence; freq. = frequency; CI = confidence interval.
Women With Multiple IPV Relationships (n = 50) Compared With Women With One IPV Relationship (Baseline) (n = 54) (Multivariate Logistic Regression Analyses).
| Independent variable | Adjusted odds ratio | 95% CI |
|
|---|---|---|---|
| Model 4a ( | |||
| Anxiety | 1.776 | [1.085, 2.909] | .022 |
| Work/income | |||
| Employed (baseline) | ns | ||
| Student | ns | ||
| Unemployed | ns | ||
| Disability benefits | 17.578 | [1.943, 159.055] | .011 |
| Retired |
| ||
| Other | ns | ||
| Work assessment allowance | ns | ||
| Length of relationship | 0.987 | [0.980, 0.994] | <.001 |
| Immigrant | 0.136 | [0.027, 0.694] | .016 |
| Education | ns | ||
| Considers partner | ns | ||
| Model 4b ( | |||
| Anxiety | ns | ||
| Childhood emotional abuse | ns | ||
| Anxiety × Childhood Emotional Abuse
| 1.031 | [1.010, 1.053] | .004 |
| Work/income | |||
| Employed (baseline) | ns | ||
| Student | ns | ||
| Unemployed | ns | ||
| Disability benefits | 13.551 | [1.603, 114.558] | .017 |
| Retired |
| ||
| Other | ns | ||
| Work assessment allowance | ns | ||
| Length of relationship | 0.990 | [0.983, 0.997] | .004 |
| Immigrant | 0.114 | [0.020, 0.649] | .014 |
Note. Multivariate logistic regression, forward stepwise (Wald). Model 4a Cox & Snell R2 = .348, Nagelkerke R2 = .465, Hosmer and Lemeshow test = .549. Model 4b Cox & Snell R2 = .375, Nagelkerke R2 = .501, Hosmer and Lemeshow test = .416. Prev. = prevalence, freq. = frequency. CI = confidence interval.
There were no retired in the 1IPVR group and one in each of the other two groups.
Statistical interaction between Anxiety and Childhood emotional abuse.