The prevalence, contexts, and impact of children's exposure to domestic violence in Jamaica
This study explored the prevalence of children’s exposure to adult perpetrated domestic violence (DV) in Jamaica and investigated the contextual factors of the affected families and the wellbeing of exposed children. The study was a cross-sectional survey of 7,182 children aged 9 to 17 years, drawn from 20 primary and secondary schools. The sample consisted of 60.8% of girls with 69% living in rural communities. The surveys were completed in classroom settings. The questions from the IPSCAN Child Abuse Screening Tool (ICAST-C; Runyan et al., 2015) were used to assess respondents’ lifetime experience of witnessing three forms of adult-perpetrated DV; shouting and screaming that frightened the child, physical violence (e.g., hitting, slapping), and serious violent threat (e.g., the use of weapons to threaten or harm). Findings indicated that 41.6% of the children had been exposed to at least one type of DV (22.5% had experienced one, 11.8% had experienced two and 7.3% had experienced three forms of violence). There was a statistically significant difference in the children’s sense of safety in their homes depending on whether they had been exposed to DV. Those exposed to DV had a lower sense of safety than those not exposed and the more forms of DV experienced the lower their sense of safety. Of those not exposed, 85.8% reported always feeling safe at home compared with 37.2% of those exposed to three forms of DV. Study limitations and implications of the findings are discussed.
Funding
None in Three(Ni3) - A Centre for the Development, Application, Research and Evaluation of Prosocial Games for the Prevention of Gender-based Violence
UK Research and Innovation
Find out more...History
School
- Social Sciences and Humanities
Department
- Criminology, Sociology and Social Policy
Published in
Caribbean Journal of PsychologyVolume
15Issue
2Pages
132 - 162Publisher
UWI PressVersion
- AM (Accepted Manuscript)
Rights holder
© Caribbean Journal of PsychologyPublisher statement
This paper was accepted for publication in the Caribbean Journal of Psychology, Fray, C., Powell-Booth, K., Nelson, K., Harvey, R., Reid, P., Wager, N., Willmott, D., Mason, S., Jones, A. (2022). The Prevalence and Impact of Children’s Exposure to Domestic Violence in Jamaica. Caribbean Journal of Psychology, 15(2) 132 - 162. DOI: 10.37234/CJP.2022.1502.A005 and reproduced by permission of the University of the West Indies Press https://doi.org/10.37234/CJP.2022.1502.A005.Acceptance date
2022-10-11Publication date
2022-12-31Copyright date
2023ISSN
0799-1401eISSN
0799-2831Publisher version
Language
- en