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Understanding Control in Adolescent and Young Adult Relationships

Understanding Control in Adolescent and Young Adult Relationships ARTICLE Understanding Control in Adolescent and Young Adult Relationships Marina Catallozzi, MD; Peter J. Simon, MD, MPH; Leslie L. Davidson, MD, MSc; Vicki Breitbart, MSW, EdD; Vaughn I. Rickert, PsyD Objectives: To describe the receipt of controlling be- ling behaviors plus physical or sexual victimization, re- haviors in young women’s dating relationships and the spectively; and 8.6% reported all forms of RV. Adjusted association with physical and sexual relationship vio- Poisson regression found that age 15 to 18 years (rela- lence (RV) and to ascertain whether young women ex- tive risk, 1.40), Hispanic ethnicity (1.29), childhood ex- periencing controlling from partners support RV screen- posure to domestic violence (1.11), ever pregnant (1.21), ing and respond honestly. older partner (1.28), recent physical (1.89) or sexual (1.93) victimization, and uncomfortable asking for con- Design: Anonymous audio computer-assisted self- dom use (1.39) were significantly associated with in- interview. creased episodes of controlling behavior by a partner. Younger women and those who reported being victim- Setting: Reproductive health center. ized by controlling behaviors were more than twice as likely to object to screening by a health care provider, Participants: A total of 603 women aged 15 to 24 years and those who reported http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png JAMA Pediatrics American Medical Association

Understanding Control in Adolescent and Young Adult Relationships

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References (45)

Publisher
American Medical Association
Copyright
Copyright 2011 American Medical Association. All Rights Reserved. Applicable FARS/DFARS Restrictions Apply to Government Use.
ISSN
2168-6203
eISSN
2168-6211
DOI
10.1001/archpediatrics.2011.32
pmid
21464379
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

ARTICLE Understanding Control in Adolescent and Young Adult Relationships Marina Catallozzi, MD; Peter J. Simon, MD, MPH; Leslie L. Davidson, MD, MSc; Vicki Breitbart, MSW, EdD; Vaughn I. Rickert, PsyD Objectives: To describe the receipt of controlling be- ling behaviors plus physical or sexual victimization, re- haviors in young women’s dating relationships and the spectively; and 8.6% reported all forms of RV. Adjusted association with physical and sexual relationship vio- Poisson regression found that age 15 to 18 years (rela- lence (RV) and to ascertain whether young women ex- tive risk, 1.40), Hispanic ethnicity (1.29), childhood ex- periencing controlling from partners support RV screen- posure to domestic violence (1.11), ever pregnant (1.21), ing and respond honestly. older partner (1.28), recent physical (1.89) or sexual (1.93) victimization, and uncomfortable asking for con- Design: Anonymous audio computer-assisted self- dom use (1.39) were significantly associated with in- interview. creased episodes of controlling behavior by a partner. Younger women and those who reported being victim- Setting: Reproductive health center. ized by controlling behaviors were more than twice as likely to object to screening by a health care provider, Participants: A total of 603 women aged 15 to 24 years and those who reported

Journal

JAMA PediatricsAmerican Medical Association

Published: Apr 1, 2011

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