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What is the Impact of IPV on Children?

Katrinna M. Matthews, DSW, MEd, LAPSW

November 13, 2020

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Question

What is the impact of IPV on children?

Answer

Intimate partner violence (IPV) in the home has immediate and lasting effects on children. IPV constitutes many of the adverse childhood experiences that a child may endure. Children exposed to IPV are subject to emotional and physical abuse, emotional and physical neglect, and a plethora of other issues such as mental illness, substance abuse, and incarceration. 

Approximately 45 million children will be exposed to violence during childhood and of that 45 million, 90% are direct eyewitnesses of violence. Research indicates that males who batter their wives, batter their children, 30% to 60% of the time, and children who witnessed domestic violence are at an increased risk for post-traumatic stress disorder, aggressive behavior, anxiety, impaired development, difficulty interacting with peers, academic problems, and a higher incidence of substance abuse.

 It is also important to note that children who witnessed domestic violence are at an increased risk of dating violence and have a more difficult time with partnerships as well as experience a difficult time with parenting when they get older. 

 

This Ask the Expert is an edited excerpt from the webinar, Intimate Partner Violence: The Basics, presented by Katrinna M. Matthews, DSW, MEd, LAPSW.


katrinna m matthews

Katrinna M. Matthews, DSW, MEd, LAPSW

Dr. Katrinna Matthews earned a Doctor of Social Work from the University of St. Thomas in St. Paul MN, a Master of Science in Social Work from the University of Tennessee in Knoxville, TN, and a Master of Education in Counselor Education from the University of Mississippi in Oxford, MS. Dr. Matthews is a Licensed Advanced Practice Social Worker (LAPSW) in the state of Tennessee, and has over 15 years of social work experience. Dr. Matthews has worked with diverse patient populations in a variety of settings, ranging from child welfare to in-center hemodialysis. Her passion is social work education, trauma, and medical social work, especially as it relates to bringing awareness to health disparities and ultimately closing the health gap. 


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