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Journal Article

Citation

Graham K, Bernards S, Flynn AM, Tremblay PF, Wells S. Violence Vict. 2012; 27(5): 730-743.

Affiliation

Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, Canada. kgraham@uwo.ca

Copyright

(Copyright © 2012, Springer Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

23155723

Abstract

Research has shown a consistent link between intimate partner violence (IPV) and depression, although this association may vary by gender, role in IPV (victim, perpetrator, or bidirectional), and aggression severity. We evaluated these factors in a telephone survey of 14,063 Canadians. All three factors were found to affect the association of depression with IPV. Specifically, depression was more strongly associated with IPV by a partner (i.e., victimization) for women but with aggression toward a partner (i.e., perpetration) for men. Severity of aggression was associated with increased risk of depression for both one-sided and bidirectional aggression by a partner but more strongly for one-sided aggression toward a partner. These findings suggest that research, prevention, and treatment should focus on all roles in IPV, not just male-to-female aggression.


Language: en

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