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Created
January 02, 2025 12:22
by
meh302
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Updated
January 02, 2025 12:22
by
[unknown user]
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Added Creator Miranda P. Kaye
January 02, 2025 12:22
by
meh302
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Added Creator Keith R Aronson
January 02, 2025 12:22
by
meh302
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Added Creator Daniel F Perkins
January 02, 2025 12:22
by
meh302
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Updated
Keyword, Publisher, Publisher Identifier (DOI), and 2 more
Show Changes
January 02, 2025 12:22
by
meh302
Keyword
- Revictimization, Military, Family Violence, Maltreatment, Child Abuse, Domestic Violence, Advocacy, Factors Predicting, Families With Children, Child Maltreatment, Army, Intervention Program, Family Advocacy Program, Family Advocacy, Community Risk, Experience, Social Isolation, Central Registry, Program Intervention, Intervention Dose, Family Treatment, Protective Interventions, Case File, Risk Factors, Community Factors, Effective Treatment, Intervention Characteristics, Family Experience, Deleterious Effects, Treatment Factors, Treatment Components, Military Families, Family Community, Exposure To Family Violence, Family Factors, Protective Factors, Exposure To Violence, Military Family, Registries
Publisher
Publisher Identifier (DOI)
- 10.1177/10775595211008997
Description
- <p>The Army Family Advocacy Program (Army FAP) strives to prevent family violence and intervene to reduce the deleterious effects of exposure to family violence. This paper examines the individual, family, community, and treatment factors associated with family violence revictimization. Case files of 134 families with substantiated child maltreatment and associated Army FAP interventions that closed in 2013 were coded across risk and protective factors and intervention characteristics and were matched to Army Central Registry files to identify revictimization rates through 2017. Revictimization, experienced by 23% of families, was predicted by community risk and reduced by intervention dose. With the high rates of relocations, housing or neighborhood issues, and the isolation military families experience and the relationship of these concerns to repeated family violence, identifying the impact of community risk is particularly important. Similarly, research that elucidates the effective treatment components is needed.</p>
Publication Date
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Updated
January 02, 2025 12:22
by
meh302
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January 02, 2025 12:23
by
meh302
Description
<p>The Army Family Advocacy Program (Army FAP) strives to prevent family violence and intervene to reduce the deleterious effects of exposure to family violence. This paper examines the individual, family, community, and treatment factors associated with family violence revictimization. Case files of 134 families with substantiated child maltreatment and associated Army FAP interventions that closed in 2013 were coded across risk and protective factors and intervention characteristics and were matched to Army Central Registry files to identify revictimization rates through 2017. Revictimization, experienced by 23% of families, was predicted by community risk and reduced by intervention dose. With the high rates of relocations, housing or neighborhood issues, and the isolation military families experience and the relationship of these concerns to repeated family violence, identifying the impact of community risk is particularly important. Similarly, research that elucidates the effective treatment components is needed.</p>
- The Army Family Advocacy Program (Army FAP) strives to prevent family violence and intervene to reduce the deleterious effects of exposure to family violence. This paper examines the individual, family, community, and treatment factors associated with family violence revictimization. Case files of 134 families with substantiated child maltreatment and associated Army FAP interventions that closed in 2013 were coded across risk and protective factors and intervention characteristics and were matched to Army Central Registry files to identify revictimization rates through 2017. Revictimization, experienced by 23% of families, was predicted by community risk and reduced by intervention dose. With the high rates of relocations, housing or neighborhood issues, and the isolation military families experience and the relationship of these concerns to repeated family violence, identifying the impact of community risk is particularly important. Similarly, research that elucidates the effective treatment components is needed.
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Updated Creator Miranda P. Kaye
January 02, 2025 12:23
by
meh302
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Updated Creator Keith R Aronson
January 02, 2025 12:23
by
meh302
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Updated Creator Daniel F Perkins
January 02, 2025 12:23
by
meh302
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Added
famviolenceArmy2021.pdf
January 02, 2025 12:23
by
meh302
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January 02, 2025 12:23
by
meh302
License
- https://rightsstatements.org/page/InC/1.0/
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Published
January 02, 2025 12:23
by
meh302
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Updated
January 02, 2025 21:04
by
[unknown user]