Sensitivity to betrayal and new intimate relationship building in survivors of intimate partner violence
Alice Melin, Paul M. Salkovskis

TL;DR
This study explores how past intimate partner violence affects women's sensitivity to betrayal and their ability to form new relationships.
Contribution
The study identifies how relationship satisfaction correlates with betrayal sensitivity in IPV survivors.
Findings
All IPV groups showed higher betrayal sensitivity than the non-IPV group.
IPV satisfied group had lower scores in betrayal causing life change and lack of trust.
Betrayal sensitivity may hinder forming new relationships or positive relationships may reduce these effects.
Abstract
There is evidence that prior experience of intimate partner violence (IPV) can lead to high levels of sensitivity to betrayal, shame and self‐criticism and interfere with initiation, development and maintenance of future intimate relationships. We measured these variables in women survivors of IPV, evaluating whether they are associated with the quality of current relationships. A cross‐sectional, between‐groups design was used, comparing women survivors of IPV divided into those satisfied with current intimate relationships, those dissatisfied and IPV survivors not in such a relationship. Women without a history of IPV were included as a benchmark group. Four groups: IPV single (N = 34), IPV dissatisfied (N = 25), IPV satisfied (N = 32) and those who had not experienced IPV (N = 42) were compared for betrayal sensitivity, followed by a secondary comparison of shame and…
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Taxonomy
TopicsIntimate Partner and Family Violence · Attachment and Relationship Dynamics · Grief, Bereavement, and Mental Health
