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Intimate Partner Violence and Neighborhood Income: A Longitudinal Analysis

NCJ Number
247821
Journal
Violence Against Women Volume: 20 Issue: 1 Dated: January 2014 Pages: 42-58
Author(s)
Amy E. Bonomi; Britton Trabert; Melissa L. Anderson; Mary A. Kernic; Victoria L. Holt
Date Published
January 2014
Length
17 pages
Annotation

This investigation used a longitudinal design to examine the relationship between neighborhood-level income, individual-level predictors, and police-reported intimate partner violence in 5,994 urban couples followed over 2 years.

Abstract

This investigation used a longitudinal design to examine the relationship between neighborhood-level income, individual-level predictors, and police-reported intimate partner violence in 5,994 urban couples followed over 2 years. At the baseline abuse incident, intimate partner violence rates were highest in the poorest neighborhoods (13.8 per 1,000 women in the lowest income quartile, followed by 12.1, 8.2, and 5.0 in the respective higher income quartiles). However, in the longitudinal analysis, weapon use at the baseline abuse event was a much stronger predictor of repeat abuse (incident rate ratios ranging from 1.72 for physical abuse to 1.83 for non-physical abuse) than neighborhood income. Abstract published by arrangement with Sage.