TY - JOUR
T1 - Cigarette Smoking in Women Victims of Police-Reported Intimate Partner Violence
T2 - The Role of Childhood Maltreatment, Type of Partner Abuse, and Psychological Distress Symptoms
AU - Lamela, Diogo
AU - Pinto, Tiago Miguel
AU - Jongenelen, Inês
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 Taylor & Francis.
PY - 2024/8/14
Y1 - 2024/8/14
N2 - Existing research on the relationship between intimate partner violence (IPV) and cigarette smoking primarily involves low-risk, physical IVP-focused studies on community women. As a result, the risks associated with cigarette smoking in women victims of severe IPV have not been fully explored. This study examined the association between exposure to different forms of childhood maltreatment, exposure to physical, psychological, and sexual IPV, and current psychological distress symptoms with cigarette smoking in a high-risk sample of women victims of police-reported severe IPV. Participants included 162 women victims of police-reported severe IPV recruited in shelters for domestic violence and Child Protective Services in Portugal. Participants provided self-reports on childhood maltreatment physical, psychological, and sexual violence), physical, psychological, and sexual IPV, psychological distress symptoms (anxiety, depressive, somatic, and posttraumatic stress disorder symptoms), and daily cigarette consumption. Results revealed significant associations between daily cigarette consumption and exposure to IPV, physical abuse during childhood, psychological IPV, and anxiety symptoms in women experiencing police-reported severe IPV. Childhood maltreatment may increase vulnerability for emotion dysregulation, promoting addictive behaviors to regulate distress. Smoking can be an unhealthy regulating strategy to reduce the distress related to chronic exposure to psychological IPV. Future effective health promotion interventions in women facing severe forms of IPV may target emotional regulation and incorporate a trauma-focused approach.
AB - Existing research on the relationship between intimate partner violence (IPV) and cigarette smoking primarily involves low-risk, physical IVP-focused studies on community women. As a result, the risks associated with cigarette smoking in women victims of severe IPV have not been fully explored. This study examined the association between exposure to different forms of childhood maltreatment, exposure to physical, psychological, and sexual IPV, and current psychological distress symptoms with cigarette smoking in a high-risk sample of women victims of police-reported severe IPV. Participants included 162 women victims of police-reported severe IPV recruited in shelters for domestic violence and Child Protective Services in Portugal. Participants provided self-reports on childhood maltreatment physical, psychological, and sexual violence), physical, psychological, and sexual IPV, psychological distress symptoms (anxiety, depressive, somatic, and posttraumatic stress disorder symptoms), and daily cigarette consumption. Results revealed significant associations between daily cigarette consumption and exposure to IPV, physical abuse during childhood, psychological IPV, and anxiety symptoms in women experiencing police-reported severe IPV. Childhood maltreatment may increase vulnerability for emotion dysregulation, promoting addictive behaviors to regulate distress. Smoking can be an unhealthy regulating strategy to reduce the distress related to chronic exposure to psychological IPV. Future effective health promotion interventions in women facing severe forms of IPV may target emotional regulation and incorporate a trauma-focused approach.
KW - Adult
KW - Adult Survivors of Child Abuse/psychology
KW - Cigarette Smoking/psychology
KW - Crime Victims/psychology
KW - Female
KW - Humans
KW - Intimate Partner Violence/psychology
KW - Middle Aged
KW - Police/psychology
KW - Portugal
KW - Psychological Distress
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85201297859&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1080/15299732.2024.2383188
DO - 10.1080/15299732.2024.2383188
M3 - Article
C2 - 39140216
AN - SCOPUS:85201297859
SN - 1529-9732
VL - 25
SP - 643
EP - 655
JO - Journal of Trauma and Dissociation
JF - Journal of Trauma and Dissociation
IS - 5
ER -