What difference does it make if they have children?

In this study, we examined to what extent the presence of children had an impact on service providers’ decision making when faced with IPV and the parents’ reported consequences of MR-IPV for the children.

Journal of Family Violence, springer.com.

Journal of Family Violence, Volume 39, Issue 8, November 2024, springer.com.

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A mixed methods study of the impact of children on service providers’ perception of MR-IPV has been published in Journal of Family Violence: Vatnar, S.K.B., Dahl, S.L., Kristiansen, S.T.T. et al. What Difference does it Make if they have Children? A Mixed Methods Study of the Impact of Children on Service Providers’ Perception of Mandatory Reporting of Intimate Partner Violence. J Fam Viol (2024). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10896-024-00773-1

Whether professionals consider children to be an important factor regarding mandatory reporting of intimate partner violence (MR-IPV) remains unknown. In the present study, we examined to what extent the presence of children had an impact on service providers’ decision making when faced with IPV and the parents’ reported consequences of MR-IPV for the children. This is a mixed methods study combining quantitative (N = 374 service providers and N = 86 IPV victims) and qualitative (N = 59 service providers and N = 10 IPV victims) data in a convergent parallel design. Results showed that the service providers found it easier to set aside confidentiality in IPV cases when the purpose was safeguarding children. The findings indicated some confusion about the difference and interface between the obligation to notify the child welfare service and to report under MR-IPV to the police. IPV victims who had experienced MR-IPV reported mixed consequences for their children. However, more than half reported that their children were better off after the MR-IPV. The recognition of the impact of IPV on children in practice, research and policy-making might lead to some inconsistencies and contradictions in how service providers respond to IPV. Accordingly, service providers must take into account the challenges in situations where MR-IPV might be applicable in order to protect both the child(ren) and the victimized adult from IPV.

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