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When Does a Battered Woman Seek Help From the Police? The Role of Battered Women's Functionality

NCJ Number
229809
Journal
Journal of Family Violence Volume: 25 Issue: 2 Dated: February 2010 Pages: 195-204
Author(s)
Hee Yun Lee; Eonju Park; Elizabeth Lightfoot
Date Published
February 2010
Length
10 pages
Annotation
This study examined how battered women's functional limitations resulting from domestic violence affected womens involvement with the police.
Abstract
This study explores how women's functional limitations resulting from domestic violence lead to police involvement. Examining functionality is a broader approach to exploring domestic violence outcomes than looking at injuries or impairments, and in this study we look at the social participation aspects of social functioning. One hundred eleven battered women in 4 metropolitan cities in the U.S. participated in anonymous telephone surveys. Approximately 80 percent of the battered women in the sample were involved with the police due to their experiences of domestic violence. Women's functionality was significantly associated with battered women's police involvement after controlling for socio-demographic and violence-related covariates. The current study identifies one aspect of women's functioning - social participation - as a critical predictor of their seeking of help from the police, and suggests implications for practice, including the need for police and domestic violence agencies to have awareness of the concept of functional limitations within a broader context of understanding disability. Tables, appendixes, and references (Published Abstract)