Yale University

The mediating role of avoidance coping between IPV victimization, mental health, and substance abuse among women experiencing bidirectional IPV.

TitleThe mediating role of avoidance coping between IPV victimization, mental health, and substance abuse among women experiencing bidirectional IPV.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2014
AuthorsFlanagan, Julianne C., VĂ©ronique Jaquier, Nicole Overstreet, Suzanne C. Swan, and Tami P. Sullivan
JournalPsychiatry research
Date Published2014 Aug 2
ISSN1872-7123
AbstractAvoidance coping is consistently linked with negative mental health outcomes among women experiencing intimate partner violence (IPV). This study extended the literature examining the potentially mediating role of avoidance coping strategies on both mental health and substance use problems to a highly generalizable, yet previously unexamined population (i.e., women experiencing bidirectional IPV) and examined multiple forms of IPV (i.e., psychological, physical, and sexual) simultaneously. Among a sample of 362 women experiencing bidirectional IPV, four separate path models were examined, one for each outcome variable. Avoidance coping mediated the relationships between psychological and sexual IPV victimization and the outcomes of PTSD symptom severity, depression severity, and drug use problems. Findings indicate nuanced associations among IPV victimization, avoidance coping, and mental health and substance use outcomes.
DOI10.1016/j.psychres.2014.07.065
Alternate JournalPsychiatry Res

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