While Covid-19 related lockdowns may have decreased the spread of a deadly virus, they
appear to have created an environment for increased domestic violence, a new study suggests.
The study, published in the journal American
Behavioral Scientist, indicates that 39 per cent respondents reported having
experienced violence in their relationship and 74 per cent of those people were
women.
"The pandemic, like other kinds of disasters,
exacerbates the social and livelihood stresses and circumstances that we know
lead to intimate partner violence," said lead researcher Clare Cannon from
the University of California - Davis.
According to the researcher, the extra stress can
also cause mental health issues, increasing individuals' perceived stress and
reactions to stress through violence and other means.
For the study, the team involved 374 participants
who completed an online survey about previous disaster experience, perceived
stress, their current situation as it relates to Covid-19, if they experienced
intimate partner violence, and what their personal and household demographics
were.
Respondents, whose average age was 47, were asked
about how Covid-19 had affected them financially and otherwise.
The researchers also found that 10 per cent of the
sample reported experiencing intimate partner violence, the people that had
experienced that violence reported more stress than the segment of the sample
that had not experienced it.
Furthermore, the results show that as perceived
stress increased, participants were more likely to end up as victims of
violence.
Intimate partner violence is defined as physical,
emotional, psychological or economic abuse and stalking or sexual harm by a
current or former partner or spouse, according to the Centers for Disease
Control and Prevention.
http://www.indiapress.org/gen/news.php/The_Pioneer/400x60/0
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