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Publications [#362094] of Terrie E. Moffitt

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Journal Articles

  1. Buffarini, R; Coll, CVN; Moffitt, T; Freias da Silveira, M; Barros, F; Murray, J (2021). Intimate partner violence against women and child maltreatment in a Brazilian birth cohort study: co-occurrence and shared risk factors.. BMJ global health, 6(4), e004306. [doi]
    (last updated on 2024/04/22)

    Abstract:

    Background

    Intimate partner violence (IPV) against women and child maltreatment (CM) are major public health problems and human rights issues and may have shared causes. However, their overlap is understudied. We investigated the prevalence of IPV and CM, their co-occurrence in households and possible shared risk factors, in the general population of a Brazilian urban setting.

    Methods

    Prospective population-based birth cohort, including over 3500 mother-child dyads with maternal reports on both IPV and CM when children were 4 years old. Eleven neighbourhood, family and parental risk factors were measured between birth and age 4 years. Bivariate and multivariate Poisson regression models with robust variance were used to test which potential risk factors were associated with IPV, CM and their co-occurrence.

    Results

    The prevalence of any IPV and CM were 22.8% and 10.9%, respectively; the co-occurrence of both types of violence was 5%. Multivariate analyses showed that the overlap of IPV and CM was strongly associated with neighbourhood violence, absence of the child's biological father, paternal antisocial behaviour in general and a mother-partner relationship characterised by high levels of criticism, maternal depression and younger maternal age. A concentration of many risk factors among 10% of the population was associated with a sixfold increase in risk for overlapping IPV and CM compared with households with no risk factors.

    Conclusion

    IPV and CM share important risk factors in the family and neighbourhood environments and are particularly common in households with multiple social disadvantages and family difficulties. Integrated preventive interventions are needed.

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