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Journal Article

Citation

Rosen LN, Parmley AM, Knudson KH, Fancher P. Mil. Med. 2002; 167(12): 959-963.

Affiliation

National Institute of Justice, Washington, DC, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2002, Association of Military Surgeons of the United States)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

12502167

Abstract

The relationship of intimate partner violence to psychological distress and the mediating or moderating effects of social support were examined among 99 married active duty Army women and 477 married active duty Army men. Although approximately 40% of both the men and the women had experienced physical partner violence in the past year, in neither group was physical violence correlated with psychological distress when controlling for other variables. Among women, psychological abuse inflicted by a partner was significantly associated with greater psychological distress. Among men, poor marital adjustment was associated with greater psychological distress. An unexpected significant interaction effect was found among women indicating that those who were violent toward their partners under conditions of high peer support experienced greater psychological distress.


Language: en

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