Authors
Carol A Fonseca, Karen B Schmaling, Colby Stoever, Casey Gutierrez, Arthur W Blume, Michael L Russell
Publication date
2006/7/1
Journal
Military medicine
Volume
171
Issue
7
Pages
627-631
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Description
Variables associated with intimate partner violence (IPV) were examined within a sample of military personnel preparing to deploy. Soldiers with intimate relationships processed for mobilization through Fort Bliss, Texas, completed a questionnaire that queried demographic information, relationship satisfaction, stress, risky alcohol use behaviors, and tactics used during intimate relationship conflict. Four hundred forty-nine deploying soldiers (15.8% of 2,841 with usable data) reported IPV in the past year. Younger age, less education, less relationship satisfaction, more stress, and risky alcohol use behaviors were significant individual predictors of engaging in IPV. The results of this study are discussed in terms of their implications for targeting efforts to reduce IPV among military personnel.
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