@article{ref1, title="Intimate partner violence, maternal stress, nativity, and risk for maternal maltreatment of young children", journal="American journal of public health", year="2009", author="Taylor, Catherine A. and Guterman, Neil B. and Lee, Shawna J. and Rathouz, Paul J.", volume="99", number="1", pages="175-183", abstract="Objectives. We examined the associations of intimate partner violence (IPV) and maternal risk factors with maternal child maltreatment risk within a diverse sample of mothers. Methods. We derived the study sample (N=2508) from the Fragile Families and Child Well-Being Study. We conducted regression analyses to examine associations between IPV, parenting stress, major depression, key covariates, and 4 proxy variables for maternal child maltreatment. Results. Mothers reported an average of 25 acts of psychological aggression and 17 acts of physical aggression against their 3-year-old children in the year before the study, 11% reported some act of neglect toward their children during the same period, and 55% had spanked their children during the previous month. About 40% of mothers had experienced IPV by their current partner. IPV and maternal parenting stress were both consistent risk factors for all 4 maltreatment proxy variables. Although foreign-born mothers reported fewer incidents of child maltreatment, the IPV relative risk for child maltreatment was greater for foreign-born than for US-born mothers. Conclusions. Further integration of IPV and child maltreatment prevention and intervention efforts is warranted; such efforts must carefully balance the needs of adult and child victims.

Language: en

", language="en", issn="0090-0036", doi="10.2105/AJPH.2007.126722", url="http://dx.doi.org/10.2105/AJPH.2007.126722" }