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Substance Use by Soldiers Who Abuse Their Spouses

NCJ Number
232832
Journal
Violence Against Women Volume: 16 Issue: 11 Dated: November 2010 Pages: 1295-1310
Author(s)
Sandra L. Martin; Deborah A. Gibbs; Ruby E. Johnson; Kristen Sullivan; Monique Clinton-Sherrod; Jennifer L. Hardison Walters; E. Danielle Rentz
Date Published
November 2010
Length
16 pages
Annotation
This study analyzed data on several thousand soldier spouse abuse offenders to determine the prevalence of substance use during abusive incidents, and to determine differences between substance-using and non-substance using offenders.
Abstract
Data on 7,424 soldier spouse abuse offenders were analyzed to determine the prevalence of substance use during abusive incidents, and to examine differences between substance-using and non-substance-using offenders. Results showed that 25 percent of all offenders used substances during abusive incidents, with males and non-Hispanic Whites being more likely to have used substances. Substance-using offenders were more likely to perpetrate physical spouse abuse and more severe spouse abuse. These findings underscore the importance of educating military personnel (including commanders) about links between substance use and domestic violence, and of coordinating preventive and therapeutic substance abuse and violence-related interventions. (Published Abstract) Tables and references