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The Stability of Intimate Partner Violence Perpetration From Adolescence to Emerging Adulthood in Sexual Minorities

NCJ Number
253396
Journal
Journal of Adolescent Health Volume: 62 Issue: 6 Dated: June 2018 Pages: 747-749
Author(s)
Ryan C. Shorey; Paula J. Fite; Joseph R. Cohen; Gregory L. stuart; Jeff R.. Temple
Date Published
June 2018
Length
3 pages
Annotation

This study examined the stability of physical and sexual intimate partner violence (IPV) perpetration from adolescence to emerging adulthood among sexual minorities.

Abstract

Adolescents who identified as a sexual minority (N=135; 71.1 percent female; mean age=15.02, standard deviation=.77; 34.1 percent African-American/Black, 26.7 percent White, 22.2 percent Hispanic) from southeast Texas were assessed annually for 6 years on their IPV perpetration. Structural equation modeling demonstrated that physical IPV perpetration was modestly stable across years 1-4 (24.6 percent, 24.6 percent, 26.4 percent, and 21.6 percent, respectively), decreased in year 5 (18.6 percent), and increased in year 6 (24.5 percent). The stability of sexual IPV perpetration was high across all 6 years (14.3 percent, 13 percent, 14.9 percent, 10.8 percent, 12.4 percent, and 14.4 percent). (publisher abstract modified)