e, date, 2012 state of the science congress on nursing research, washington, dc
Post on 30-Dec-2015
32 Views
Preview:
DESCRIPTION
TRANSCRIPT
Vulnerabilities of Clients Seeking Services for Intimate Partner Violence: Does Hispanic
Ethnicity and Birthplace Matter?
1School of Nursing and Health Studies, 2School of Education and Human Development, University of Miami
e, Date, 2012 State of the Science Congress on Nursing Research, Washington, DC
Center of Excellence for Health Disparities Research
Research reported in this presentation was supported by the National Institute On Minority Health and Health Disparities of the National Institutes of Health under Award Number P60MD002266. The content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health.
1Gonzalez-Guarda, R.M., 2Fernandez, M., 1Mitchell, E. & 1Lopez, J.
Background and Significance
• Intimate Partner Violence (IPV), physical, sexual, psychological abuse and/or stalking by a current or previous partner, is significant public health problem
• Racial and ethnic minority groups appear to be disproportionately affected by IPV
• Little is known about differences among victims of IPV that can account for these differences, especially within Hispanic sub-groups
(Bonomi et al., 2009; Caetano, Field, Ramisetty-Mikler & McGrath, 2005; CDC, 2011)
Intersecting Vulnerabilities: The Multicultural Power and Control
Wheel
(Chavis & Hill, 2009, pg. 128)
Purpose
1. Explore differences in individual, relationship and abuse vulnerabilities among White, Black and Hispanic victims seeking services for IPV
2. Explore variations in these characteristics among Hispanics from different countries of birth
Conceptual Framework
IndividualCharacteristic
•Age•Income•Health insurance
RelationshipCharacteristics
•Marital status•Living with partner•Financial dependence
AbuseCharacteristics
•Type of abuse•Abuse duration•Weapon used
Race/Ethnicity of Victim
White
Black
Hispanic
BirthplaceCuba
NicaraguaU.S.
Methods
• Design• Secondary data analysis
• Cross-sectional
• Sample & Setting• Family Justice Center in
South Florida
• Measures• Intake Form
• Procedures• Data entry of paper doc into
research database
• QA
• Analysis• ANOVA
• Chi-square analysis
Clients Seen 3/11 - 9/11n = 539
Victims of IPV n = 380
Hispanic IPV Victims’ Birthplace
n = 238
US (n=120)Cuba (n=53)
Colombia (n=34)Nicaragua (n=31)
White, Black and Hispanic Victims of IPV
n = 368
Results: Does Race/Ethnicity Matter?
White%(n) orM (SD)
Black%(n) orM (SD)
Hispanic%(n) orM (SD)
Test Statisticχ²(df,n)F(df,df)
Individual
Age 35.81(10.67) 32.09(10.41) 35.73 (11.21) F(2,365)= 3.00
Income (month) 876.35(3234.56)1533.01(7503.70)
2813.51(13077.00) F(2,365)= .62
Health Insurance 50%(18) 50%(34) 29%(78) χ²(4,368)= 14.57**
Relationship
Marital Status (Married)
33%(12) 22%(15) 48%(128) χ²(10,368)= 44.08***
Living with Abuser (Yes)
17%(6) 16%(11) 14%(37) χ²(6,368)= 2.30
Financially Dependent
31%(11) 24%(16) 38%(100) χ²(10,368)= 5.97
*p <.05, **p <.01, ***p<.001
Results: Does Race/Ethnicity Matter?
White%(n) orM (SD)
Black%(n) orM (SD)
Hispanic%(n) orM (SD)
Test Statisticχ²(df, N)
Abuse
Physical 72%(26) 81(54) 72%(26) χ²(4,368)= 2.76
Sexual 22%(8) 13%(9) 16%(43) χ²(4,368)= 1.92
Verbal 75%(27) 64%(43) 87%(232) χ²(4,368)= 24.92***
Psychological 58%(21) 37%(25) 68%(180) χ²(4,368)= 22.03***
Stalking 31%(11) 30%(20) 29%(78) χ²(4,368)= 1.27
Weapon 31%(11) 28%(19) 15%(39) χ²(4,368)= 20.07**
*p <.05, **p <.01, ***p<.001
Results: Does Birthplace Matter?
US%(n) orM (SD)
Cuba%(n) orM (SD)
Colombia%(n) orM (SD)
Nicaragua%(n) orM (SD)
Test Statisticχ²(df,n)F(df,df)
Individual
Age 31.32(9.15) 40.09(11.59) 37.26(9.81) 38.45(15.91) F(3,234)= 10.65***
Income2,922
(11,631)4,742 (22,203) 453 (667) 1,856(6,137) F(3,234)= .673
Health Insurance 56%(67) 36%(19) 24%(8) 26%(8) χ²(6,238)= 21.24**
Relationship
Marital Status 24%(29) 26%(29) 74%(25) 55%(17) χ²(15,238)= 57.29***
Living with Abuser 13%(15) 19%(10) 18%(6) 16%(5) χ²(9,238)= 16.03
Financially Dep. 26%(31) 30%(16) 47%(16) 26%(8) χ²(9,238)= 17.57*
*p <.05, **p <.01, ***p<.001
Results: Does Race/Ethnicity Matter?
US%(n) orM (SD)
Cuba%(n) orM (SD)
Colombia%(n) orM (SD)
Nicaragua%(n) orM (SD)
Test Statisticχ²(df,n)
Abuse
Physical 78%(94) 72%(38) 68%(23) 74%(23) χ²(6,238)= 5.54
Sexual 16%(19) 9%(50 15%(5) 23%(7) χ²(6,238)= 4.47
Verbal75%(90) 79%(42) 88%(30) 87%(27)
χ²(6,238)= 8.55
Psychological 48%(57) 55%(29) 71%(24) 65%(20) χ²(6,238)= .160
Stalking 37%(44) 21%(11) 29%(10) 23%(70 χ²(6,238)= 7.82
Weapon 29%(35) 19%(10) 0 13%(4) χ²(9,238)=
32.73***
*p <.05, **p <.01, ***p<.001
Summary of Findings
• Overall, Black and Hispanic clients reported more vulnerable individual, relationship and abuse characteristics
• White victims were more likely to report having a weapon used
• Although more individual and relationship differences were found by birthplace, less variation existed in reported abuse
• U.S. born Hispanics were younger and more likely to report health insurance and that a weapon was used during the abuse
• Colombian-born victims were more likely to be married and financially dependent on the perpetrator
Limitations
• Secondary data analysis• Quality of intake form completion• Limited measures
• Cross-sectional• Complexities of race/ethnicity and vulnerability
• Different groups sizes• Unable to include other groups (e.g., Haitians,
Mexicans)• Generalizability
• Only can tell us about IPV victims accessing services
Implications
• Research• Longitudinal studies • Measures/assessments for victimization• Culturally tailored interventions
• Practice• Group and individual patterns relating to
vulnerability • Policy
• Increase access to IPV social and health services (e.g., victim compensation, health insurance)
• Role that gun policies play on weapon use norms in abusive intimate relationships
Thank You
rosagonzalez@miami.edu
top related