4.4 Article

Alcohol and Drug Abuse in Men Who Sustain Intimate Partner Violence

Journal

AGGRESSIVE BEHAVIOR
Volume 38, Issue 1, Pages 31-46

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ab.20418

Keywords

domestic violence; male victims; intimate terrorism; alcohol abuse; drug abuse

Funding

  1. National Institute of Mental Health [5R21MH074590]

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Extensive work has documented an association between sustaining intimate partner violence (IPV) and alcohol/drug abuse among women, yet little research has documented the same association in men, even though men comprise 25-50% of all IPV victims in a given year. This study investigates the associations among sustaining IPV and alcohol/drug abuse among both a clinical and community sample of men. The clinical sample is comprised of 302 men who sustained intimate terrorism-a form of IPV that is characterized by much violence and controlling behavior-from their female partners and sought help. The community sample is composed of 520 men, 16% of whom sustained common couple violence, a lower level of more minor reciprocal IPV. Analyses showed that among both groups of men who sustained IPV, the prevalence and frequency of alcohol/drug abuse was significantly higher than in men who did not sustain IPV. However, a dose-response relationship between sustaining IPV and alcohol/drug abuse was found only among men in the community sample. Path modeling showed that, for the community sample, the best fitting models were ones that showed that the alcohol/drug abuse predicted IPV victimization, an association that was fully mediated by their use of IPV. Aggr. Behav. 38: 31-46, 2012. (C) 2011 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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