Research is scarce on the consequences of women's use of aggression on their depressive symptoms, particularly in relationships where women use and are victimized by intimate partner violence (IPV). Further, research has yet to identify factors that may mediate the aggression-depressive symptoms link among women who experience bidirectional IPV. Participants in the current study were a community sample of 369 women who used and were victimized by physical aggression with a current male partner in the previous 6 months. A serial multiple mediator model was used to examine the mediating roles of aggression-related shame and avoidance coping on the relation between women's use of aggression and depressive symptoms. Results showed a significant indirect effect of women's use of aggression on their depressive symptoms through both aggression-related shame and avoidance coping; indirect effects were not significant through each mediator separately. After controlling for women's IPV victimization, the study found a positive association between women's use of aggression and aggression-related shame, which in turn was related to greater avoidance coping, and subsequently, greater depressive symptoms. These findings highlight the importance of examining shame and avoidance coping as consequences of women's use of aggression and its effects on poorer mental health outcomes among women who use and are victimized by IPV. (publisher abstract modified)
Women's Use of Aggression and Their Depressive Symptoms: The Mediating Effect of Aggression-Related Shame and Avoidance Coping Among Women Experiencing Bidirectional Intimate Partner Violence
NCJ Number
253353
Journal
Violence and Victims Volume: 33 Issue: 3 Dated: 2018 Pages: 533-546
Date Published
2018
Length
14 pages
Annotation
This study examined the potential mediating roles of shame and avoidance coping in the relationship between women's use of intimate partner aggression and their depressive symptoms.
Abstract