Battered Women Clinical Trial
Official title:
The Differential Effects of Intimate Terrorism and Situational Couple Violence on the Mental Health of Abused Chinese Women
The purpose of this study is to extend the extant work on the typology of intimate partner violence (IPV) by employing mixed methods to collect quantitative and qualitative data.
Although post-traumatic stress disorder and depression have been identified as the two most
common consequences of intimate partner violence, research has generally not differentiated
the effects of different types of intimate partner violence on victim's mental health. With
intimate partner violence treated as a single phenomenon rather than having different types,
abused women are unlikely to receive the most appropriate interventions.
Johnson's typology of control has been used increasingly to classify intimate partner
violence based on physical assault and controlling behavior. Two distinct types of the
violence, Intimate Terrorism and Situational Couple Violence, have received much attention.
The two differ not only in the cause and trajectory of the violence but also in the effects
including mental health outcomes. Although control is a critical factor in distinguishing
intimate terrorism from situational couple violence, there is no consensus on what
constitutes high or low control in physically violent intimate relationships. Partly, this
may be due to the sole reliance on quantitative measures to determine the levels of control.
By understanding the context in which control tactics are used, qualitatively different
phenomena between violent relationships with high control and those with low control may be
more apparent. Thus, there is a need to collect both quantitative and qualitative data on
the use of controlling behaviors.
It has also been hypothesized that intimate terrorism and situational couple violence have
different mental health outcomes but few studies have examined this empirically and none has
studied women's experiences of the negative psychological consequences as victims of these
two types of violence.
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Observational Model: Cohort, Time Perspective: Retrospective
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