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Volume 31, Issue 4: August Supplemental Issue, 2004
Abstract
Disaster Down East: Using Participatory Action Research
to Explore Intimate Partner Violence in Eastern North Carolina
Pamela York Frasier, PhD, MSPH, MA, Leigh Belton, MA, Elizabeth
Hooten, ScD, MSPH, Marci Kramish Campbell, PhD, RD, Brenda
DeVellis, PhD, Salli Benedict, MPH, Carla Carrillo, MPH, Pam
Gonzalez, BA, Kristine Kelsey, PhD, RD, Andrea Meier, PhD
In the aftermath of Hurricane Floyd in 1999, a Community Advisory
Committee requested assistance from its university partners
(University of North Carolina) to address stress and increased
risk for intimate partner violence (IPV). Collected from 12
study work sites, baseline data indicated that IPV rates were
higher among blue-collar women in eastern North Carolina than
national population–based rates suggest. IPV victims
reported higher levels of perceived stress, psychological
distress, somatic complaints, and post-traumatic stress disorder
(PTSD) symptoms than did nonvictimized coworkers. As for the
relationship of the flood to IPV, no significant increase
in IPV incidence occurred after the flood. Regardless of their
flood experience, however, IPV victims consistently reported
greater stress, PTSD symptoms, and somatic and psychological
problems. Moreover, IPV victims may be at higher risk for
stress-mediated chronic illnesses and for using negative coping
behaviors. This study uses an established trusting relationship
between researchers and community members to explore community
needs and inform intervention design.
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