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Article
Sheltering for safety in community women with divorce histories.
Faculty Scholarship
  • Ashlee J. Warnecke, University of Louisville
  • Yvette Z. Sabo, University of Louisville
  • Vicki E. Burns, Western Governors University
  • Rafael Fernandez-Botran, University of Louisville
  • James J. Miller, University of Louisville
  • Tamara L. Newton, University of Louisville
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
8-1-2016
Department
Psychological and Brain Sciences
Abstract

This cross-sectional study compared the prevalence of formal and informal sheltering (i.e., staying in an agency shelter, or with friends/family, respectively), and evaluated associations with abuse severity. Community women (N = 197) with divorce histories reported on lifetime intimate partner abuse, including sheltering for safety. Prevalence of informal sheltering (43%) exceeded that of formal sheltering (11%). Rates/levels of coercive control, severe violence, injury, and police involvement were comparable for women who sheltered formally or informally, and exceeded those of women who never sheltered. Sheltering histories can be identified in community samples of women with divorce histories. Informal sheltering is prevalent, and comparable to formal sheltering in terms of correlations with abuse severity.

Comments

Copyright © 2016 (The Authors). Reprinted by permission of SAGE Publications.

DOI
10.1177/1077801216664426
Citation Information

This is the accepted version of the following article:

Warnecke, Ashlee J., et al. "Sheltering for Safety in Community Women with Divorce Histories." 2016. Violence Against Women, in press.

which can be found in final form at: http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/1077801216664426