TY - SER AU - Sutherland, Georgina AU - Krnjacki, Lauren AU - Hargrave, Jen AU - Kavanagh, Anne AU - Llewellyn, Gwynnyth AU - Kavenagh, Mellissa AU - Bollier, Anne-Marie ED - Centre of Research Excellence in Disability and Health (CRE-DH) TI - Violence against people with disability in Australia: differences by impairment: fact sheet no. 3 PY - 2020/// PB - University of Melbourne, KW - ABUSED MEN KW - ABUSED WOMEN KW - DISABILITY KW - DISABLED PEOPLE KW - DOMESTIC VIOLENCE KW - INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE KW - PEOPLE WITH LEARNING DISABILITIES KW - PHYSICAL ABUSE KW - PREVALENCE KW - PSYCHOLOGICAL ABUSE KW - SEXUAL HARASSMENT KW - SEXUAL VIOLENCE KW - STALKING KW - STATISTICS KW - SURVEYS KW - INTERNATIONAL KW - AUSTRALIA N1 - CRE-DH fact sheet 3 N2 - In Australia the extent and nature of violence against people with disability varies by impairment. This fact sheet is third in a series of 5 fact sheets on violence against people with disability in Australia and is based on current data for men and women aged 18-64 years. Data are sourced from the Australian Bureau of Statistics 2016 Personal Safety Survey where people have reported on their recent experience of violence in the last 12 months and since the age of 15, referred to here as Lifetime Experience. The survey invites people to disclose impairments. We report on data using this term acknowledging that disability stems from the interaction between impairments (a limitation in function) and societal barriers created by attitudes, structures and environments. Prevalence estimates are for individual impairment types including: physical; sensory (including sight and hearing) and speech; cognitive (including intellectual impairments, stroke, head injury and brain damage); and psychological impairments. Many people report more than one impairment type and not all impairment types are represented in these data. * Violence includes physical or sexual violence, emotional abuse, intimate partner violence, stalking and/or harassment. This fact sheet is part of a series of 5 fact sheets on violence against people with disability in Australia and is based on current data for men and women aged 18-64 years. Intimate partner violence (sometimes called domestic violence) is generally described as abuse that happens in the context of a current or former intimate partner relationship (married, living with or dating). Data are sourced from the Australian Bureau of Statistics 2016 Personal Safety Survey where people have reported on their experience of violence in the last 12 months and since the age of 15. We recognise that not all people with disability are represented in this survey and that experiences of violence are under-reported. This fact sheet was produced by the team at the Centre of Research Excellence in Disability and Health (CRE-DH) and funded by the Melbourne Disability Institute. (From the website). Follow the links to related information. Record #6951 UR - https://doi.org/10.26188/12991526.v2 UR - https://credh.org.au/nature-and-extent-of-violence/ UR - https://melbourne.figshare.com/articles/online_resource/THE_AUSTRALIAN_DISABILITY_AND_VIOLENCE_DATA_COMPENDIUM/12280010 ER -