
@article{ref1,
title="Self-injury and domestic violence in young adults during the CoViD-19 pandemic: trajectories, precursors, and correlates",
journal="Journal of research on adolescence",
year="2021",
author="Steinhoff, Annekatrin and Bechtiger, Laura and Ribeaud, Denis and Murray, Aja Louise and Hepp, Urs and Eisner, Manuel and Shanahan, Lilly",
volume="31",
number="3",
pages="560-575",
abstract="We examined the longitudinal course of, and pre- and during-pandemic risk factors for, self-injury and domestic physical violence perpetration in young adults during the COVID-19 pandemic. Data came from a Swiss longitudinal study (N = 786, age ~22 in 2020), with one prepandemic (2018) and four during-pandemic assessments (2020). The prevalence of self-injury did not change between April (during the first Swiss national lockdown) and September 2020 (postlockdown). Domestic violence perpetration increased temporarily in males. Prepandemic self-injury was a major risk factor for during-pandemic self-injury. Specific living arrangements, pandemic-related stressor accumulation, and a lack of adaptive coping strategies were associated with during-pandemic self-injury and domestic violence. Stressor accumulation had indirect effects on self-injury and domestic violence through negative emotions.<p /> <p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="1050-8392",
doi="10.1111/jora.12659",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/jora.12659"
}