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Journal Article

Citation

Park H, Lee J, Han J, Min S. Korean J. Psychom. Med 2020; 108-115.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2020, Korean Psychosomatic Society)

DOI

10.22722/KJPM.2020.28.2.108

PMID

unavailable

Abstract

OBJECTIVEs@#:This study looked at the effects of chronic IPV on suicide ideation among married women in the country. @*Methods@#:This study used data from the five-year-old Korea Welfare Panel and analyzed using questions about verbal and physical violence, depression and suicide ideation that were investigated every year. Age, education, and economic levels, drinking, religion, chronic disease, satisfaction with family relationship, satisfaction with social relationship, were included as variables. @*Results@#:The five-year cumulative score of verbal violence had a statistically significant effect on the depres-sive symptom, and the relative risk was 1.180. The relative risk of five-year-old cumulative score of verbal violence in suicidal ideation was 1.276, and it was also significant even if they exclude the effects of depressive symptom.On the other hand, the five-year cumulative score of physical violence was found to have no significant impact on suicide ideation if they excluded the effects of depressive symptom. @*Conclusions@#:Unlike previous studies, this study found that chronic verbal IPVs increase suicide ideation,even though they do not contain effects of depression. Such findings suggest that intervention in IPV in married women may help reduce the nation's suicide rate.


Language: en

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