Intimate partner violence (IPV) is a significant cause of intentional
injury among women but remains underrecognized, and its relationship to other
risk factors for all-cause injury remains poorly defined. This study aimed to
assess IPV and its association with alcohol abuse, illicit substance use,
selected mental illnesses, and other risk factors for injury.
This is a cross-sectional study of prospectively collected
data among adult females admitted to a rural, Level I trauma center.
Well-validated instruments assessed IPV, substance abuse, and mental illness.
Bivariate relationships were assessed with χ, odds ratios, and t test analyses.
Eighty-one women were enrolled; 51% reported lifetime IPV,
and 31% reported past-year IPV. Both groups were significantly more likely to
have a mental illness than those without a history of IPV. Those reporting
lifetime IPV exposure were significantly more likely to report illicit
substance use, and past-year IPV was associated with alcohol abuse (28% vs.
7.1%, p = 0.01). Participants reporting past-year IPV were significantly more
likely to have a partner possessing a firearm (40% vs. 12.5%, p = 0.005).
The experience of lifetime and past-year IPV among women at
a Level I, rural trauma center was high, and it was significantly associated
with mental illness, substance abuse, and high-risk scenarios for intentional
injury including firearm ownership by a significant other. These findings
inform the potential value of IPV screening and intervention and suggest that
IPV, mental illness, and substance abuse should be considered associated
entities in prevention and recidivism reduction efforts in the female trauma
population.
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By: Hink AB1, Toschlog E, Waibel B, Bard M.
- 1From the Division of General Surgery (A.B.H.), Department of Surgery, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston; and Division of Trauma and Surgical Critical Care (E.T., B.W., M.B.), Department of General Surgery, The Brody School of Medicine at East Carolina University, Greenville, South Carolina.
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