2012
DOI: 10.1007/s10896-012-9479-4
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The Treatment Needs of Substance Abusing Batterers: A Comparison of Men Who Batter Their Female Partners

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Cited by 35 publications
(39 citation statements)
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“…Other pathological personality traits were once also presumed to explain the perpetration of marital violence, yet this presumption was never substantiated. In light of this fact, the present study's fi ndings corroborate the results of the majority of the studies concerning violent partners (Askeland & Heir, 2014;Jose, O'Leary, Gomez, & Foran, 2014;Maneta et al, 2013;Reingle, Jennings, Connell, Businelle, & Chartier, 2014;Thomas, Bennett, & Stoops, 2013). Furthermore, the personality trait most predictive of women's violent acts, mood instability, is more closely tied to borderline personality disorder; and the trait most predictive of male violence, aggressiveness, is more strongly associated with antisocial PD.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 88%
“…Other pathological personality traits were once also presumed to explain the perpetration of marital violence, yet this presumption was never substantiated. In light of this fact, the present study's fi ndings corroborate the results of the majority of the studies concerning violent partners (Askeland & Heir, 2014;Jose, O'Leary, Gomez, & Foran, 2014;Maneta et al, 2013;Reingle, Jennings, Connell, Businelle, & Chartier, 2014;Thomas, Bennett, & Stoops, 2013). Furthermore, the personality trait most predictive of women's violent acts, mood instability, is more closely tied to borderline personality disorder; and the trait most predictive of male violence, aggressiveness, is more strongly associated with antisocial PD.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 88%
“…In a cross-sectional study of male IPV perpetrators, those who used alcohol or drugs were more likely to (a) have high BPO, and (b) perpetrate more severe violence than those who did not use alcohol or drugs (Thomas, Bennett, & Stoops, 2013), indicating a potential interactional risk of substance use and BPO on IPV severity. However, no study has directly tested the role of substance use in the association between BPD and IPV perpetration.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Rates of co-occurrence between IPV and alcohol and other substances are 40-60% (Kraanen, Scholing, & Emmelkamp, 2012;Thomas, Bennett, & Stoops, 2013), and a meta-analytic review indicated moderate relationships between alcohol use/abuse and IPV perpetration (Foran & O'Leary, 2008). National population surveys have found the perpetration of physical aggression to be nearly three times higher for men reporting frequent binge drinking compared to men who do not report binge drinking (e.g., Stalans & Richie, 2008).…”
Section: Section I: Basic Research On Intimate Partner Violence Definmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Meta-analyses have also demonstrated a significant relation between alcohol and IPV, particularly among clinical samples characterized by more severe alcohol problems (Foran & O'Leary, 2008;Stith, Smith, Penn, Ward, & Trit, 2004), suggesting that alcohol abuse increases the severity of the violence (Thomas et al, 2013), as well as the likelihood of physical injury to the partner (Brecklin, 2002;Graham, Bernards, Wilsnack, & Gmel, 2011). A number of studies have shown that IPV decreases after an alcohol abuse specific treatment intervention without an IPV component (O'Farrell & Murphy, 1995), suggesting the important role it plays in perpetration.…”
Section: Section I: Basic Research On Intimate Partner Violence Definmentioning
confidence: 99%