Journal Article10.1007/S10896-007-9099-6
Mothering and Domestic Violence: A Longitudinal Analysis
TL;DR: The authors found that mothers of children exposed to domestic violence may indeed compensate for exposure to violence in their parenting interactions with their 2- to 12-year-old children, by being more sensitive and responsive to their children than other parents.
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Abstract: The quality of the relationships that parents, particularly mothers, have with their children is a potent predictor of children's future development. Recent research suggests that mothers of preschool-age children exposed to domestic violence may be more sensitive and responsive to their children than other parents. This heightened sensitivity and responsiveness in relationships may be key to the successful development of some children exposed to domestic violence; however this theory remains unex- plored. The Canadian National Longitudinal Survey of Children and Youth provided a large sample size suitable for longitudinal analysis of the relationship between exposure to family violence and parenting behaviors. Analysis revealed that mothers of children exposed to domestic violence may indeed compensate for exposure to violence in their parenting interactions with their 2- to 12- year-old children.
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Citations
Closing the quality gap: revisiting the state of the science (vol. 3: quality improvement interventions to address health disparities).
Melissa L McPheeters,Sunil Kripalani,Neeraja B. Peterson,Rachel T Idowu,Rebecca N Jerome,Shannon A Potter,Jeffrey C Andrews +6 more
- 01 Aug 2012
TL;DR: Overall, QI interventions were not shown to reduce disparities, and some increased effect is seen in disadvantaged populations; these studies should be replicated and the interventions studied further as having potential to address disparities.
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European report on preventing child maltreatment.
D. Sethi,Mark A Bellis,Karen Hughes,Ruth Gilbert,F. Mitis,Gauden Galea +5 more
- 01 Jan 2013
TL;DR: The report offers policy-makers a preventive approach based on strong evidence and shared experience to support them in responding to increased demands from the public to tackle child maltreatment and makes compelling arguments for increased investment in prevention and for mainstreaming prevention objectives into other areas of health and social policy.
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Impacts of domestic violence on child growth and nutrition: a conceptual review of the pathways of influence.
TL;DR: A conceptual framework for the pathways by which domestic violence against mothers may impair child growth and nutrition, prenatally and during the first 36 months of life is proposed.
203
The impact of crime victimization on quality of life.
TL;DR: It is indicated that crime victimization impacts multiple domains, including parenting skills, impaired occupational functioning, higher rates of unemployment, and problematic intimate relationships, however, data on relationships betweenCrime victimization and overall life satisfaction were mixed, suggesting the need for further investigation.
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Children Experiencing Domestic Violence: A Research Review
Nicky Stanley
- 01 Jan 2011
TL;DR: In this paper, a review explores the research and evidence around children's experience of domestic violence and the role of multi-agency service responses and interventions, focusing on the effects of abuse on children's development.
142
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