Is Readiness to Take Action Among Women in Violent Relationships a Catastrophic Phenomenon?

被引:8
作者
Katerndahl, David A. [1 ]
Burge, Sandra K. [1 ]
Ferrer, Robert L. [1 ]
Becho, Johanna [1 ]
Wood, Robert [2 ]
机构
[1] Univ Texas Hlth Sci Ctr San Antonio, Dept Family & Community Med, 7703 Floyd Curl Dr, San Antonio, TX 78229 USA
[2] Univ Texas Hlth Sci Ctr San Antonio, San Antonio, TX 78229 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会;
关键词
battered women; domestic violence; perceptions of domestic violence; anything related to domestic violence; intervention; treatment; legal intervention; INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE; HELP-SEEKING BEHAVIOR; DOMESTIC VIOLENCE; ALCOHOL-USE; VICTIMS; ABUSE; SURVIVORS; DECISIONS; LEGAL; WHITE;
D O I
10.1177/0886260517698280
中图分类号
DF [法律]; D9 [法律];
学科分类号
0301 ;
摘要
Taking action among women in violent relationships appears to involve sudden changes and reversals after periods of building stress, suggesting that decision making is a "catastrophic" phenomenon. This study sought to determine whether readiness-to-change is best modeled as a cusp catastrophic (CCM) phenomenon among women in violent relationships. A total of 143 women who experienced violence in the previous month completed baseline and end-of-study interviews assessing her hope, coping strategies, social network, and readiness-for-action (seeking help, taking legal action, and leaving) concerning the violence. Daily assessments of his violent behavior, forgiveness sought and given, and her perceived need-for-action were collected via telephone Interactive Voice Response for 8 weeks. Using regression analysis, the impact of factor-analyzed asymmetry (violence burden) and bifurcation (hope and cope, support, forgiveness, and number of children) variables on the outcomes (readiness-for-help, legal action, and leaving) was modeled, comparing the CCM against linear models to determine which model accounts for the most variance in each outcome. Cusp catastrophe models for all three actions accounted for more variance than either linear model comparison, but violence burden was only relevant to readiness-for-help and different bifurcation variables were at work for each action. While forgiveness was an important bifurcation factor in readiness-for-help and number of children served as the bifurcation factor for readiness-for-legal-action, readiness-to-leave was more complex with both number of children and hope-and-cope as bifurcation factors. Not only should we expect sudden changes in readiness but efforts to facilitate decision making should focus on addressing the bifurcation factors that may distort her interpretation of reality.
引用
收藏
页码:1610 / 1634
页数:25
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] African American Women’s Readiness to Change Abusive Relationships
    Melanie J. Bliss
    Emma Ogley-Oliver
    Emily Jackson
    Sharon Harp
    Nadine J. Kaslow
    Journal of Family Violence, 2008, 23 : 161 - 171
  • [32] The Meaning of Choosing a Spouse Among Ultra-Orthodox Jewish Women Who Found Themselves in a Violent Relationship
    Band-Winterstein, Tova
    Tuito, Ilanit
    VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN, 2018, 24 (06) : 727 - 744
  • [33] Breaking Up Is Hard to Do: Psychological Entrapment and Women's Commitment to Violent Dating Relationships
    Katz, Jennifer
    Tirone, Vanessa
    Schukrafft, Melanie
    VIOLENCE AND VICTIMS, 2012, 27 (04) : 455 - 469
  • [34] Reproductive Control Among Women with Violent Partners in Paraguay
    Castillo, Marco
    Melian, Mercedes
    Alejandra Pantelides, Edith
    VIOLENCE AND GENDER, 2018, 5 (04) : 250 - 258
  • [35] To Care and to Control? Lights and Shadows in Empowerment Processes with Women in Violent Relationships
    Toffanin, Angela M.
    Busi, Beatrice
    SOCIOLOGIA, 2024, 6 (04): : 369 - 388
  • [36] Beyond violence: Threat reappraisal in women recently separated from intimate-partner violent relationships
    Tyson, Sheryl Y.
    Herting, Jerald R.
    Randell, Brooke P.
    JOURNAL OF SOCIAL AND PERSONAL RELATIONSHIPS, 2007, 24 (05) : 693 - 706
  • [37] Inhibiting and Facilitating Factors to End a Violent Relationship: Patterns of Behavior Among Women in Spain
    Ruiz-Perez, Isabel
    Rodriguez-Madrid, Nieves
    Plazaola-Castano, Juncal
    Montero-Pinar, Isabel
    Escriba-Agueir, Vicenta
    Marquez-Herrera, Nayra
    Sanz-Peregrin, Carlos
    Nevot-Cordero, Adela
    VIOLENCE AND VICTIMS, 2013, 28 (05) : 884 - 898
  • [38] Prevalence and correlates of intimate partner violence among women with HIV in serodifferent relationships in Nairobi, Kenya
    Kaggiah, Anne
    Wilson, Katherine
    Richardson, Barbra A.
    Kinuthia, John
    Farquhar, Carey
    McClelland, R. Scott
    PLOS ONE, 2022, 17 (08):
  • [39] Relationships Among Alcohol Outlet Density, Alcohol use, and Intimate Partner Violence Victimization Among Young Women in the United States
    Waller, Martha W.
    Iritani, Bonita J.
    Christ, Sharon L.
    Clark, Heddy Kovach
    Moracco, Kathryn E.
    Halpern, Carolyn Tucker
    Flewelling, Robert L.
    JOURNAL OF INTERPERSONAL VIOLENCE, 2012, 27 (10) : 2062 - 2086
  • [40] Which came first: the readiness or the change? Longitudinal relationships between readiness to change and drinking among college drinkers
    Collins, Susan E.
    Logan, Diane E.
    Neighbors, Clayton
    ADDICTION, 2010, 105 (11) : 1899 - 1909