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Joan A. Samuels-Dennis Marilyn Ford-Gilboe Piotr Wilk William R. Avison Susan Ray 《Journal of family violence》2010,25(6):603-617
Data from 247 single mothers were used to partially validate a theoretical model that highlights the process through which
post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) develops among women. Structural equation modeling was used to assess the direct and
indirect relationship between cumulative trauma (CT) and mothers’ PTSD symptom severity. Additionally, we examined the meditational
role played by mothers’ strains and resources and the moderating role played by mothers’ residence in an intersectionally
advantaged versus disadvantaged neighborhood. A good fit was found between the hypothesized model and data. Mothers’ strains
and personal resources played a significant mediating role in the relationship between CT and PTSD symptom severity. Neighborhood
of residence did not moderate the CT-PTSD process. Implication for practice and treatment are discussed. 相似文献
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Banjar Ohud Ford-Gilboe Marilyn Wong Carol Befus Deanna Alilyyani Bayan 《Journal of family violence》2022,37(2):337-353
Journal of Family Violence - Functional gastrointestinal disorders (FGIDs) and symptoms have been identified as possible health consequences of intimate partner violence (IPV). However, whether... 相似文献
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Drawing on Connell’s (Gender and power: Society, the person and sexual politics. California: Stanford University Press, 1987; Masculinities. Berkeley, CA: University of California Press, 1995) model of gender relations, this paper examines patterns of intimate partner violence among women who have recently left
an abusive partner. In so doing, we attempt to better understand the social structural factors that shape the relations of
power and control in intimate violent heterosexual unions. The data come from the first wave of a longitudinal prospective
survey of 309 women who had left an abusive partner in the previous 3 years. Our data suggest that structured relations of
inequality, namely relations of production, power and cathexis, shape women’s risk of abuse and harassment after leaving,
and do so in ways that shape relations of coercive control. These results have implications for understanding the social context
within which male violence against women occurs, and how this context constrains and/or enables women’s strategies for leaving
and safety.
This research was funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research (CIHR) New Emerging Team Grant #106054 and Institute
of Gender and Health Operating Grant #15156 (Marilyn Ford-Gilboe, Principal Investigator). The authors thank the participants
in the Women’s Health Effects Study. We also thank Julie McMullin, Kim Shuey, and the Health Effects research team for their
helpful feedback. 相似文献
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