2009
DOI: 10.1007/s10567-009-0048-1
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Assessing Children’s Exposure to Intimate Partner Violence

Abstract: Child exposure to intimate partner violence (IPV) is widely acknowledged as a threat to the psycho-social and academic well-being of children. Unfortunately, as reflected in the literature, the specific link between such exposure and childhood outcomes is ambiguous. Based on a review of the literature, this article suggests that this state of affairs is due, in part, to the manner with which exposure to IPV is operationally defined. After reviewing the dominant strategies for operationally defining exposure to… Show more

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Cited by 30 publications
(36 citation statements)
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“…Including reports from children rather than relying on reports from caregivers alone yields a more comprehensive assessment of children’s exposure to violence (Kolko, Kazdin & Day 1996). Previous studies evaluating concordance between caregivers and children have found discrepancies in reports of domestic violence (Knutson et al, 2009, Thomson et al, 2002); the child’s age and gender are significant associated with greater reporting of PTEs by children (Kuo et al, 2000). The clinical significance of this study is that it evaluates variability in concordance patterns between caregiver and child reports in a multi-year study of vulnerable children situated in low resource settings.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…Including reports from children rather than relying on reports from caregivers alone yields a more comprehensive assessment of children’s exposure to violence (Kolko, Kazdin & Day 1996). Previous studies evaluating concordance between caregivers and children have found discrepancies in reports of domestic violence (Knutson et al, 2009, Thomson et al, 2002); the child’s age and gender are significant associated with greater reporting of PTEs by children (Kuo et al, 2000). The clinical significance of this study is that it evaluates variability in concordance patterns between caregiver and child reports in a multi-year study of vulnerable children situated in low resource settings.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 94%
“…Academic performance. The overall association between IPV exposure and academic outcomes has been described as ambiguous (Knutson, Lawrence, Taber, Bank, & DeGarmo, 2009), though research has found exposure to physical marital aggression and violence to be associated with poor academic progress and performance (Haeseler, 2006;Jayasinghe et al, 2009;Margolin, Vickerman, Oliver, & Gordis, 2010;Peek-Asa et al, 2007). A study of Chinese adolescents in Hong Kong found witnessing domestic violence to be associated with cognitive functioning (-0.13, p < .05), as measured by self and school reports of academic performance (Ho & Cheung, 2010).…”
Section: Academic Outcomesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In American, 7 million Children are living in severely violent homes, defined as homes in which partners kicked, beat up, choked, or used a weapon during violent acts [Howell, Miller and Graham-Bergmann, 2012]. Surveys conducted had shown that 21-34% of women will be physically victimized by an intimate male during adulthood [Knutson et al, 2009] and that according to census-based population projections, more than a million women each year and upward of 21 million women in their lifetimes will be victimized by a current or former spouse or cohabitating partner in America [Macy, Ermentrout and Rizo, 2012]. This Domestic Violence [IPV] is not confined to any segment of society as it occurs across ethnic, racial and socio-economic boundaries and the rates are similar across rural and urban area [Valentine, Oehme and Martin 2012].…”
Section: Literature Reviewmentioning
confidence: 99%