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Coping with Intimate Partner Violence: Battered Women's Use and Perceived Helpfulness of Emotion-Focused Coping Strategies
Authors:Emily M. Bauman  Mary Ann Dutton
Affiliation:1. American University , Washington, DC;2. Department of Psychiatry , Georgetown University , Washington, DC;3. Center for Trauma and the Community , Georgetown University Medical Center , Washington, DC
Abstract:This study investigated intimate partner violence (IPV) victims' emotion-focused coping efforts, as well as their retrospective ratings of the perceived helpfulness of these efforts, in the context of a longitudinal study of battered women's experiences over time. Four hundred and six primarily African American, low-income battered women who had experienced IPV within the previous 12 months were interviewed. Patterns of coping use and perceived helpfulness were explored. The correlation between prevalence of use of emotion-focused coping strategies and perceived helpfulness of these strategies was examined, and results showed that the strategies used by more battered women were less helpful in dealing with feelings about abuse. Implications for clinical interventions with battered women are discussed.
Keywords:Coping  battered women  intimate partner violence (IPV)  clinical interventions  self-efficacy
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