Iverson Katherine M, Jimenez Sherlyn, Harrington Kelly M, Resick Patricia A
Women's Health Sciences Division of the National Center for PTSD, VA Boston Healthcare System and Boston University, Boston, MA 02130, USA.
Violence Vict. 2011;26(1):73-87. doi: 10.1891/0886-6708.26.1.73.
This study examined the relative contributions of the three forms of childhood family violence exposure on physical intimate partner violence (IPV) victimization among recent robbery victims and tested a gender-matching modeling prediction for IPV risk. Data from a sample of 103 male and 93 female victims of a robbery were analyzed to investigate the effects of exposure to childhood physical abuse (CPA), childhood sexual abuse (CSA), and witnessing parental violence on the likelihood of IPV in adulthood. As expected, witnessing parental violence was associated with a 2.4-fold increase in IPV for both men and women. Neither CPA nor CSA was significantly associated with IPV after accounting for the effect of witnessing parental violence. There was support for the gender-matching hypothesis with men more likely to report IPV if they had witnessed mother-to-father violence and women more likely to report IPV if they had witnessed father-to-mother violence. Witnessing parental violence is strongly associated with risk for IPV victimization, particularly when the victim is the same-gender parent. Future directions and clinical implications are discussed.
本研究考察了童年时期三种形式的家庭暴力暴露对近期抢劫受害者遭受身体亲密伴侣暴力(IPV)的相对影响,并测试了IPV风险的性别匹配模型预测。对103名男性和93名女性抢劫受害者的样本数据进行分析,以调查童年身体虐待(CPA)、童年性虐待(CSA)以及目睹父母暴力对成年后IPV可能性的影响。正如预期的那样,目睹父母暴力使男性和女性遭受IPV的可能性增加了2.4倍。在考虑目睹父母暴力的影响后,CPA和CSA均与IPV无显著关联。性别匹配假设得到了支持,即男性若目睹母亲对父亲的暴力,更有可能报告遭受IPV;女性若目睹父亲对母亲的暴力,则更有可能报告遭受IPV。目睹父母暴力与遭受IPV的风险密切相关,尤其是当受害者是同性别的父母时。文中还讨论了未来的研究方向和临床意义。