Aaron J. Kivisto
University of Indianapolis
47 Papers
145 Citations
Aaron J. Kivisto is an academic researcher from University of Indianapolis. The author has contributed to research in topics: Poison control & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 39 publications. Previous affiliations of Aaron J. Kivisto include University of Tennessee & Harvard University.
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Papers
Alcohol use and intimate partner violence perpetration among college students: Assessing the temporal association using electronic diary technology.
TL;DR: In this paper, the temporal relationship between alcohol use and intimate partner violence (IPV) perpetration using state-of-the-art electronic diary assessment methods and examined the extent to which distal factors (e.g., sex, psychopathology, relationship satisfaction) moderated that association.
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Effects of Risk-Based Firearm Seizure Laws in Connecticut and Indiana on Suicide Rates, 1981-2015.
Aaron J. Kivisto,Peter Phalen +1 more
TL;DR: Risk-based firearm seizure laws in Connecticut and Indiana were associated with reduced population-level firearm suicide rates, and evidence for a replacement effect was mixed.
117
Gender Differences in Depression and Anxiety Among Victims of Intimate Partner Violence: The Moderating Effect of Shame Proneness
Ryan C. Shorey,Amanda E. Sherman,Aaron J. Kivisto,Sara R. Elkins,Deborah L. Rhatigan,Todd M. Moore +5 more
TL;DR: Results showed that gender moderated the association between physical and psychological victimization and health outcomes, such that victimization was related to increased depressive and anxious symptoms for men but not for women.
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•Journal Article
Male Perpetrators of Intimate Partner Homicide: A Review and Proposed Typology.
TL;DR: A preliminary typology is described that includes four generally distinct subtypes of male IPH perpetrators: the mentally ill, the undercontrolled/dysregulated, chronic batterer, and overcontrolled/catathymic subtypes.
86
Adolescent Suicide, Household Firearm Ownership, and the Effects of Child Access Prevention Laws.
TL;DR: There is an increased risk of adolescent suicide associated with household firearm ownership, and safe storage provisions are associated with decreased adolescent firearm suicide.
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