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      Harsh Parenting As a Potential Mediator of the Association Between Intimate Partner Violence and Child Disruptive Behavior in Families With Young Children

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          Abstract

          Young children living with intimate partner violence (IPV) are often also exposed to harsh parenting. Both forms of violence increase children’s risk for clinically significant disruptive behavior, which can place them on a developmental trajectory associated with serious psychological impairment later in life. Although it is hypothesized that IPV behaviors may spillover into harsh parenting, and thereby influence risk for disruptive behavior, relatively little is known about these processes in families with young children. The current study examines the overlap of the quality and frequency of psychological and physical forms of IPV and harsh parenting, and tests whether harsh parenting mediates the relationship between IPV and child disruptive behavior in a diverse cross-sectional sample of 81 children ages 4 to 6 years. Results suggest that mothers reporting a greater occurrence of psychologically aggressive IPV (e.g., yelling, name-calling) more often engage in psychological and physical aggression toward their children (odds ratios [ORs] = 4.6–9.9). Mothers reporting a greater occurrence of IPV in the form of physical assault more often engage in mild to more severe forms of physical punishment with potential harm to the child (ORs = 3.8–5.0). Psychological and physical forms of IPV and harsh parenting all significantly correlated with maternal reports of child disruptive behavior ( r = .29–.40). Psychological harsh parenting partially mediated the association between psychological IPV and child disruptive behavior. However, a significant direct effect of psychological IPV on preschool children’s disruptive behavior remained. Implications for child welfare policy and practice and intervention, including the need for increased awareness of the negative impact of psychological IPV on young children, are discussed.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          8700910
          28254
          J Interpers Violence
          J Interpers Violence
          Journal of interpersonal violence
          0886-2605
          1552-6518
          6 March 2015
          26 February 2015
          July 2016
          01 July 2017
          : 31
          : 11
          : 2102-2126
          Affiliations
          [1 ]University of Connecticut School of Medicine, Farmington, USA
          [2 ]University of Illinois at Chicago, USA
          [3 ]Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, USA
          [4 ]University of Texas at Austin, USA
          Author notes
          Corresponding Author: Damion J. Grasso, Department of Psychiatry, University of Connecticut School of Medicine, 263 Farmington Avenue, Farmington, CT 06030, USA. dgrasso@ 123456uchc.edu
          Article
          PMC4550562 PMC4550562 4550562 nihpa669270
          10.1177/0886260515572472
          4550562
          25724875
          fb6208b6-19a3-4624-a16a-5bafd2ec30c2

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          Article

          harsh parenting,intimate partner violence,disruptive behavior,psychological aggression

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