© 2007 American Public Health Association DOI: 10.2105/AJPH.2006.090712
Nabila El-Bassel, Louisa Gilbert, Elwin Wu, and Mingway Chang are with the Social Intervention Group, Columbia University School of Social Work, New York, NY. Jorge Fontdevila is with the Center for AIDS Prevention Studies, University of California, San Francisco. Correspondence: Requests for reprints should be sent to Nabila El-Bassel, DSW, Social Intervention Group, Columbia University School of Social Work, 1255 Amsterdam Ave, New York, NY 10027 (e-mail: ne5{at}columbia.edu).
This study examined the prevalence of perpetration of intimate partner violence among 356 men recruited from methadone maintenance treatment programs. We used logistic regression with covariance adjustment to examine the associations between intimate partner violence and illicit drug use by the participants, their female partners, or both. We found a high prevalence of intimate partner violence among the men in our sample. Significant associations between intimate partner violence and illicit drug use varied by types of drugs and whether the female partner or both partners were using drugs.
Over the past 2 decades, accumulating research has found illicit drug use to be a key risk factor for men perpetrating intimate partner violence against women.17 Research also has found strong associations between womens use of different illicit substances and experiencing intimate partner violence.810 Knowledge remains limited on how the relation between drug use and intimate partner violence varies according to whether the perpetrator, the victim, or both use illicit drugs. We addressed gaps in the knowledge base on the relation between illicit drug use by both partners in an intimate relationship and the perpetration of intimate partner violence.
A random sample of 356 eligible men was recruited from methadone maintenance treatment programs in New York City. Eligible male participants had to meet the following requirements: be aged 18 years or older; have been enrolled in a methadone maintenance treatment program for at least 3 months; and during the past year, had a sexual relationship with a woman whom he described as his girl-friend, spouse, regular sexual partner, or mother of his children.11 Physical, sexual, and injurious intimate partner violence during the past 6 months and lifetime were assessed with the Revised Conflict Tactics Scale.12 Sexual intimate partner violence pertains to coercive acts intended to engage a partner in unwanted sexual activity, that range from verbal insistence (e.g., "Insisted on having sex when my partner did not want to but did not use physical force") to physical force (e.g., used force [like hitting, holding down, or using a weapon] to make my partner have oral or anal sexual intercourse"). Injurious intimate partner violence refers to partner-inflicted violence that has caused physical injury. (An example question for minor injurious intimate partner violence is "My partner had a sprain, bruise, or small cut because of a fight with me," and an example for severe injurious intimate partner violence is "My partner passed out from being hit on the head in a fight with me.") Whereas injurious intimate violence refers to the consequences of partner-inflicted physical injury, physical intimate partner violence refers to the type of violent assault (e.g., slapping, pushing, kicking) perpetrated against the partner. Not all physical IPV necessarily results in injuries. We defined any form of intimate partner violence (combining minor and severe subscales) and any form of severe intimate partner violence as at least 1 incidence of sexual, physical, or injurious intimate partner violence. We used the Drug Use and Risk Behavior Questionnaire to measure participants use of crack or cocaine, heroin, and marijuana in the past 6 months.13 We focused on these 3 illicit drugs because they were found to be associated with intimate partner violence in the literature.4,10 Participants also reported whether their female partners used these drugs over the past 6 months. Polydrug use was defined as use of at least 2 of the 3 illicit drugs. Any illicit drug use was defined as use of any of the 3 drugs. For each type of illicit drug use, we constructed a "couples illicit drug use" variable with 4 attributes: (1) neither the participant nor his female partner used the drug, (2) only the male participant used the drug, (3) only the female partner used the drug, or (4) both the participant and his female partner used the drug. We collected data on sociodemographic characteristics (age, years of schooling, income, ethnicity, unemployment status, and incarceration status for participants and their female partners), relationship characteristics (type of relationship, length of relationship, participants contribution to household expenses), and self-reports of heavy episodic drinking, defined for men as consuming 5 or more alcoholic drinks2 and for women as consuming 4 or more alcoholic drinks14 within a 6-hour period.
To estimate the associations between the independent variables of couples illicit drug use and the dependent variables of any form of intimate partner violence, we used logistic regression with the covariance adjustment (Table 1
Of the 356 participants, 45% were Latino, 38% were African American, 11% were Caucasian, 2% were Native American, and 4% were mixed race. Their mean age was 43.6 years (SD=8.5). The percentages of male participants who used illicit drugs in the past 6 months were as follows: crack or cocaine, 37%; heroin, 51%; marijuana, 38%; and any illicit drug, 73%. For the female partner, the percentages were as follows: crack or cocaine, 22%; heroin, 17%; marijuana, 22%; and any illicit drug, 41%.
Table 2
Table 1
The high rates of perpetrating different types of recent intimate partner violence reported in this random sample of men attending methadone maintenance treatment programs underscore the need to address the co-occurring public health threat of intimate partner violence and drug abuse. Multiple associations were found between the use of different drugs by the female intimate partner or both partners and perpetration of intimate partner violence. Although the data on female partners illicit drug use were collected from the male participants, findings suggested that drug treatment programs should assess how patterns of couples drug use and female intimate partner drug use may be creating relationship problems that lead to intimate partner violence. By identifying and addressing the service needs of drug-using female partners and couples at risk for intimate partner violence, drug treatment programs may reduce couples drug use and help stem the epidemic of intimate partner violence and its deleterious effects on this population.
This study was supported by the National Institute on Drug Abuse (grant DA012335). We acknowledge the contributions of the staff of the Methadone Maintenance Treatment Program at the Beth Israel Medical Center, New York, for their help in conducting this study.
Human Participant Protection
Peer Reviewed
Contributors Accepted for publication August 21, 2006.
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