Concomitant forms of abuse and help-seeking behavior among white, African American, and Latina women who experience intimate partner violence.
Journal: Violence Against Women
Published:
Abstract
This study uses National Violence against Women Survey data to investigate the differential impact of concomitant forms of violence (sexual abuse, stalking, and psychological abuse) and ethnicity on help-seeking behaviors of women physically abused by an intimate partner (n = 1,756). Controlling for severity of the physical abuse, women who experienced concomitant sexual abuse are less likely to seek help, women who experienced concomitant stalking are more likely to seek help, whereas concomitant psychological abuse is not associated with help seeking. Ethnic differences are found in help seeking from friends, mental health professionals, police, and orders of protection. Implications for service outreach are discussed.
Authors
Sharon Flicker, Catherine Cerulli, Xi Zhao, Wan Tang, Arthur Watts, Yinglin Xia, Nancy Talbot