Physical conflict during pregnancy : a socioeconomicological, cross-cultural examination of risk and protective factors for New Zealand women

Bird, Amy L.

Physical conflict during pregnancy : a socioeconomicological, cross-cultural examination of risk and protective factors for New Zealand women Amy L. Bird, Lisa Underwood, Sarah Berry, Cameron C. Grant, Pauline Gulliver, Janet Fanslow, Polly E. Atatoa Carr, Jacinta Fa’alili-Fidow and Susan M. B. Morton - Sage, 2021 - Violence Against Women .

Violence Against Women, 2021, 27(11): 1930-1956

Participants were 5,831 women in their third trimester of pregnancy, part of a large, longitudinal, pre-birth national cohort study. Women reported on their experience of pushing and shoving, throwing or breaking objects within their relationship over the past month. Univariable regression models examined the association of a large number of potential risk and protective factors. Those significant at the univariable level were carried forward into final multivariable analyses, stratified by New Zealand’s four main ethnic groups: European, Māori, Pacific, and Asian peoples. Relationship commitment, reduced family cohesion, and perceived stress were associated with increased risk across ethnic groups. (Authors' abstract). Record #7634


ABUSED WOMEN
ASIAN PEOPLES
DOMESTIC VIOLENCE
INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE
MĀORI
PACIFIC PEOPLES
PASIFIKA
PHYSICAL ABUSE
PREGNANCY
PREVALENCE
PROTECTIVE FACTORS
RISK FACTORS
SOCIOECONOMIC FACTORS
ĀHUATANGA PĀPORI
ĀHUATANGA ŌHANGA
HAPŪ (WĀHINE)
RANGAHAU MĀORI
TATAURANGA


NEW ZEALAND