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Journal Article

Citation

Kraanen FL, Vedel E, Scholing A, Emmelkamp PM. J. Subst. Abuse Treat. 2014; 46(4): 532-539.

Affiliation

Forensic outpatient clinic De Waag, Zeeburgerpad 12b, 1018AJ Amsterdam, The Netherlands; Center for Social and Humanities Research, King AbdulAziz University, Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2014, Elsevier Publishing)

DOI

10.1016/j.jsat.2013.10.010

PMID

24365101

Abstract

The present study investigated whether (combinations of) specific substance use disorders predicted any and severe perpetration and victimization in males and females entering substance abuse treatment. All patients (N=1799) were screened for IPV perpetration and victimization; almost one third of the sample committed or experienced any IPV in the past year. For males, an alcohol use disorder in combination with a cannabis and/or cocaine use disorder significantly predicted any IPV (perpetration and/or victimization) as well as severe IPV perpetration. For females, alcohol and cocaine abuse/dependence predicted both any IPV (perpetration and/or victimization) and severe IPV perpetration. Results from the present study emphasize the importance of routinely assessing IPV in patients in substance abuse treatment and demonstrate that clinicians should be particularly alert for IPV in patients with specific substance use disorder combinations.


Language: en

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