Longitudinal Protective Factors against Intimate Partner Violence for Women Born in Australia and Women from Refugee Backgrounds
Ruth Wells, Louis Klein, Mohammed Mohsin, M. Claire Greene, Jane Fisher, Derrick Silove, Zachary Steel, Susan Rees

TL;DR
The study examines protective factors against intimate partner violence in Australian-born women and women from refugee backgrounds over time.
Contribution
The study identifies distinct protective factors for different IPV trajectory groups in two subpopulations of women.
Findings
Three IPV trajectory classes were identified: Limited, Changing, and Combined IPV.
Older age and better relationship quality were protective factors for both cohorts.
Refugee women showed a distinct pattern of protective factors for changing and combined IPV classes.
Abstract
Intimate Partner Violence (IPV) is a risk factor for depressive disorders and other harms to women and their pregnancy. There is a need for longitudinal evidence to assist with understanding the subgroups of women including those from refugee background affected by IPV. We recruited women at their prenatal visit from three antenatal clinics in Australia (January 2015–March 2016). A total of 1335 women, 650 (48.7%) born in Australia and 685 (51.3%) from refugee backgrounds, completed baseline assessment; then, Time 2 follow-up was at 6 months and Time 3 follow-up was at 24 months post birth. The WHO Intimate Partner Violence (IPV) measure was used. Latent class growth analysis grouped individuals based on trajectories of IPV across three time points. A three-step process identified characteristics associated with respective latent class membership. Similar three-class solutions were…
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Taxonomy
TopicsIntimate Partner and Family Violence · Migration, Health and Trauma · Sex work and related issues
