Goodman Lisa, Dutton Mary Ann, Vankos Natalie, Weinfurt Kevin
Department of Counseling and Developmental Psychology, Boston College.
Violence Against Women. 2005 Mar;11(3):311-36. doi: 10.1177/1077801204273297.
Using a longitudinal and ecological approach, we investigated the relationships between women's material and emotional resources and strategies and their ability to stay safe over time in a sample of 406 help-seeking African American women. The multivariate analysis demonstrated that social support served as a protective factor and resistance strategies as risk factors for reabuse during a 1-year period. It also showed an interaction between social support and history of violence such that for participants who had experienced the most severe violence, social support did not serve as a protective factor; however, for the other participants, those with the least amount of social support had a 65% predicted probability of reabuse during the next year, compared to a 20% predicted probability for women reporting the highest level of social support. Policy and programmatic implications of these findings are discussed.
我们采用纵向和生态学方法,在406名寻求帮助的非裔美国女性样本中,研究了女性的物质和情感资源与策略,以及她们随时间推移保持安全的能力之间的关系。多变量分析表明,在为期1年的时间里,社会支持是一个保护因素,而抵抗策略是再次受虐的风险因素。分析还显示了社会支持与暴力史之间的相互作用,即对于经历过最严重暴力的参与者来说,社会支持并不是一个保护因素;然而,对于其他参与者,社会支持最少的女性在次年再次受虐的预测概率为65%,而报告社会支持水平最高的女性这一预测概率为20%。我们讨论了这些研究结果对政策和项目的启示。