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1.
Violence Against Women ; 30(1): 101-125, 2024 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37807804

RESUMEN

Although intimate partner violence (IPV)-exposed mothers report distress during family court proceedings, no known research examines what helps them cope. We analyzed qualitative responses from 214 IPV-exposed mothers to the question of who/what helped during family court. Participants described (a) receiving social support, (b) accessing tools and resources, (c) modifying actions, thoughts, and emotions to adapt to a system that is not trauma-informed, (d) being believed/validated, and (e) managing post-separation family life as helpful. Participants also reported (f) barriers to navigating family law proceedings; a few expressed nothing helped. Findings support a trauma-informed, network-oriented approach to supporting family court-involved survivor mothers.


Asunto(s)
Violencia de Pareja , Femenino , Humanos , Investigación Cualitativa , Violencia de Pareja/psicología , Madres/psicología , Sobrevivientes/psicología
2.
J Fam Violence ; 38(3): 527-542, 2023.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35611345

RESUMEN

Intimate partner violence (IPV) survivors seeking safety and justice for themselves and their children through family court and other legal systems may instead encounter their partners' misuse of court processes to further enact coercive control. To illuminate this harmful process, this study sought to create a measure of legal abuse. We developed a list of 27 potential items on the basis of consultation with 23 experts, qualitative interviews, and existing literature. After piloting these items, we administered them to a sample of 222 survivor-mothers who had been involved in family law proceedings. We then used both exploratory factor analysis (EFA) and Rasch analysis (RA) to create a final measure. Analyses yielded the 14-item Legal Abuse Scale (LAS). Factor analysis supported two subscales: Harm to Self/Motherhood (i.e., using the court to harm the survivor as a person and a mother) and Harm to Finances (i.e., using the court to harm the survivor financially). The LAS is a tool that will enable systematic assessment of legal abuse in family court and other legal proceedings, an expansion of research on this form of coercive control, and further development of policy and practice that recognizes and responds to it.

3.
J Interpers Violence ; 38(1-2): NP1279-NP1298, 2023 01.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35442820

RESUMEN

Although many African American IPV survivors need services, they often do not access care. Hopelessness may partially explain low rates in help-seeking for this population and serve as a significant barrier to care for African American IPV survivors particularly those who have had prior legal system involvement. In a sample of 185 African American women, we first examined whether hopelessness mediated the relation between IPV and barriers to services. If such a mediation effect was found, we then would explore whether legal system involvement moderated the mediated effect of hopelessness on the relation between IPV and barriers to services. As anticipated, hopelessness partially served to explain (i.e., mediated) the relation between IPV and barriers to services. Further, this mediated effect was moderated by legal system involvement such that when legal system involvement was included as a moderator, hopelessness mediated the association between IPV and barriers to services only for those survivors who had been involved with the legal system. These results underscore the critical role of hopelessness as a barrier to accessing services for African American IPV survivors, especially those with prior involvement with the legal system. Recommendations are offered that underscore the importance of interventions that empower African American women who have survived violence instead of penalizing them.


Asunto(s)
Negro o Afroamericano , Violencia de Pareja , Femenino , Humanos , Violencia , Sobrevivientes
4.
Psychotherapy (Chic) ; 59(4): 511-520, 2022 12.
Artículo en Inglés | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35925724

RESUMEN

Although optimal trauma-informed care in inpatient settings is relationally oriented, gender-sensitive, racially and culturally responsive treatment, this often is not the reality. Instead, inpatient settings frequently create experiences of retraumatization, which likely are associated with poor outcomes. This article extends the literature on trauma-informed care by drawing from existing models for working with trauma and providing culturally responsive treatment to apply an integrated approach to the inpatient care setting with a focus on the unique needs and experiences of marginalized survivors of gender-based violence and racial trauma. It details the rationale for and key elements of three related frameworks for trauma-informed care and then offers recommendations for guiding its conceptualization and implementation. Ideally, these practices will be embraced on all inpatient units and particularly with women from marginalized communities who have survived interpersonal and racial trauma. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).


Asunto(s)
Pacientes Internos , Humanos , Femenino
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