Intimate partner violence
(IPV) is a significant public health and economic problem, which also increases
the risks for child maltreatment. One attribute that may contribute to both IPV
and poor parenting is hostility. Moreover, the link between hostility and these
outcomes may be mediated by substance use, such that more hostile individuals
are at greater risk for using drugs and alcohol, leading them to engage in more
aggressive and rejecting behavior towards their partners and children. We
tested this possibility in sample of 132 fathers. Additionally, we explored
whether hostility and substance use had interactive effects on IPV and
parenting by examining moderated-mediation models.
The results show that
substance use mediated the relationship between hostility and all IPV and
parenting outcomes. Furthermore, this mediated relationship was moderated by
substance use level for parenting outcomes, but not IPV. In the case of
parenting, the mediated path from hostility to aggressive and rejecting
parenting only occurred for those high in substance use.
Limitations and
implications for prevention and treatment of IPV and aggressive and rejecting
parenting are discussed.
Below: Hostility X substance use interactions predicting rejecting and aggressive parenting
Full article at: http://goo.gl/hfR04I
By: Carla Smith Stover, Ph.D. and Andrew Kiselica, B.A.
Department of
Mental Health Law and Policy, University of South Florida (http://mhlp.fmhi.usf.edu/), 13301 Bruce B. Downs
Blvd., Tampa, FL, 813-974-6019
Carla
Smith Stover: ude.fsu@revotsalraC
More at: https://twitter.com/hiv
insight

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