# Correlates of verbal and physical violence experienced and perpetrated among cisgender college women: serial cross-sections during one year of the COVID-19 pandemic

**Authors:** Deborah A. Theodore, Craig J. Heck, Simian Huang, Yuije Huang, April Autry, Brit Sovic, Cynthia Yang, Sarah Ann Anderson-Burnett, Caroline Ray, Eloise Austin, Joshua Rotbert, Jason Zucker, Marina Catallozzi, Delivette Castor, Magdalena E. Sobieszczyk

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/frph.2024.1366262 · Frontiers in Reproductive Health · 2024-07-25

## TL;DR

This study explores how stressors from the COVID-19 pandemic affected verbal and physical violence among cisgender college women in New York City over one year.

## Contribution

The study identifies specific correlates of violence experienced and perpetrated during the pandemic, emphasizing the role of living situation and social support.

## Key findings

- Experienced violence prevalence dropped from 52% to 17% over the year, while perpetrated violence decreased from 38% to 9%.
- Living with family and low social support were consistently linked to higher odds of experiencing violence.
- Racial identity and school year were significant factors in violence experience and perpetration.

## Abstract

Violence against women is a prevalent, preventable public health crisis. COVID-19 stressors and pandemic countermeasures may have exacerbated violence against women. Cisgender college women are particularly vulnerable to violence. Thus, we examined the prevalence and correlates of verbal/physical violence experienced and perpetrated among cisgender women enrolled at a New York City college over one year during the COVID-19 pandemic.

From a prospective cohort study, we analyzed data self-reported quarterly (T1, T2, T3, T4) between December 2020 and December 2021. Using generalized estimated equations (GEE) and logistic regression, we identified correlates of experienced and perpetrated violence among respondents who were partnered or cohabitating longitudinally and at each quarter, respectively. Multivariable models included all variables with unadjusted parameters X2
p-value ≤0.05.

The prevalence of experienced violence was 52% (T1: N = 513), 30% (T2: N = 305), 33% (T3: N = 238), and 17% (T4: N = 180); prevalence of perpetrated violence was 38%, 17%, 21%, and 9%. Baseline correlates of experienced violence averaged over time (GEE) included race, living situation, loneliness, and condom use; correlates of perpetrated violence were school year, living situation, and perceived social support. Quarter-specific associations corroborated population averages: living with family members and low social support were associated with experienced violence at all timepoints except T4. Low social support was associated with higher odds of perpetrated violence at T1/T3. Other/Multiracial identity was associated with higher odds of violence experience at T3.

Living situation was associated with experienced and perpetrated violence in all analyses, necessitating further exploration of household conditions, family dynamics, and interpersonal factors. The protective association of social support with experienced and perpetrated violence also warrants investigation into forms of social engagement and cohesion. Racial differences in violence also require examination. Our findings can inform university policy development on violence and future violence research. Within or beyond epidemic conditions, universities should assess and strengthen violence prevention and support systems for young women by developing programming to promote social cohesion.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** verbal and physical violence (MESH:D001039), COVID-19 (MESH:D000086382)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

66 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11306199/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11306199