“…The Center for Disease Control (CDC) estimates that the annual cost of child maltreatment is approximately $124,000 billion dollars when accounting for lifetime consequences such as health, financial, legal, and societal problems (CDC 2018a). Moreover, clear definitions of childhood maltreatment as well as exposure to IPV are important, as these bodies of literature are often plagued by vague or unclear terminology (Haselschwerdt et al 2017). Child maltreatment typically refers to five subtypes, including physical abuse (e.g., intentionally using physical force against a child, resulting in injury), sexual abuse (e.g., molesting, raping, or exposing a child to pornographic material), emotional abuse (e.g., shaming, insulting, or humiliating a child), physical neglect (e.g., not feeding or clothing a child; preventing or withholding medical, dental, or educational services; or exposing a child to hazardous, toxic, or unsanitary living conditions), and emotional neglect (e.g., withholding love or affection or being psychologically unavailable (CDC 2018b)).…”