Tuesday, December 17, 2019

The Effects Of Domestic Violence On Children - 3463 Words

Introduction In one’s career, a social worker may need to help counsel or provide services to those who have experienced domestic violence, which is a common crime of violence or other abuse when one person batters another person they live with, such as a spouse or a common-law partner. It includes physical, emotional, psychological/mental, verbal, economic/financial, and sexual abuse. It can be a cycle of violence or a repeated pattern of power and control. The battered partner in the relationship is the most important concern in this situation, however it is also crucial that any child who may have observed or are exposed to domestic violence get the help that they need as well, considering it may have a lasting impact. The batterer may†¦show more content†¦The studies observed were mostly qualitative work and used research designs of longitudinal studies and longitudinal comparison studies. Some of the data collection methods used included case studies, structured and unstructu red interviews, focus groups, secondary data/document/records analyses, meta-analyses, questionnaires, and surveys. The sampling and levels of measurement each study chose was different, depending on their research design and data collection. Participants were a mix of males and females, however most studies looked only at males. Studies have shown that between 10% and 30% of adults have witnessed physical domestic violence during their childhood (Black, Sussman, Unger, 2010; Edleson, 1999; Godbout, Dutton, Lussier, 2009; Jankowski, Leitenberg, Henning, Coffey, 1999; Sappington, Pharr, Tunstall, Rickert, 1997). It has been suggested that psychological violence has gained less empirical attention than physical violence, however the results for children witnessing psychological violence are much higher, ranging from 46% to 58% (Black et al., 2010; Godbout et al., 2009). Edleson (1999) found that child abuse and witnessing domestic violence were significantly associated with use of violence. O’Keefe (1996) discovered that as child abuse increased, the impact of witnessing domestic violence decreased,

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