(Press-News.org) Peer-reviewed – Scoping Review - People
New research from the University of East Anglia has uncovered a significant gap in understanding of a harmful form of domestic abuse known as subtle or covert abuse.
Unlike more obvious forms of physical or verbal abuse, subtle abuse is less visible but can be just as damaging to victims.
The review found that current research on this topic is limited, despite its potentially widespread impact.
The findings suggest that subtle abuse is often driven by the perpetrator’s sense of entitlement, which leads to long-term emotional and psychological harm for victims.
Lead author Rosemary Parkinson, of UEA’s School of Health Sciences, has worked as a psychotherapist for nearly 30 years, and is particularly interested in researching the subtle abuse of heterosexual women of high educational and socio-economic status in intimate relationships, a population group with which she has worked closely.
She said: “My work aims to define this kind of abuse. I am also interested in how therapists can be trained to recognise women clients who have experienced or are experiencing subtle abuse.
“The women themselves present in therapy not knowing they were or are being abused, and instead think there is something wrong with them which they need to change.”
A particular concern raised in the research is that therapists do not currently have the knowledge and training to recognise this form of abuse, as abusive partners can present as helpful and concerned when dealing with health care professionals.
However, due to the paucity of literature and training in this area, therapists lack the knowledge to identify experiences of subtle or covert abuse in intimate relationships.
Abusive relationships can therefore be missed and in some cases therapeutic work may even allow it to continue.
The abuse is often conducted in an indirect way and can be mixed with positive behaviours or performed in a positive way and is therefore easily excused and becomes the norm in a relationship.
Key behaviours of this type of abuser include:
Undermining – Denying the victim’s perception of things, disapproving through sighing or questioning, expressing disappointment, lying and gaslighting, being condescending, blaming, playing mindgames and demonstrating double standards.
Limiting – Turning the victim’s attention from their needs to the perpetrator’s, guilt-tripping, violation of boundaries, making partners focus on them and preventing partners from developing themselves or their interests.
Withholding – Avoiding communication, physical and emotional withdrawal, being moody, sulky and passive aggressive and having lack of concern, attention or affection, with no support, understanding, companionship and appreciation.
Ms Parkinson, who is studying for her Professional Doctorate in Health and Social Care, said: “Changes in women victims can include self-doubt, a loss of self-worth, negative mood changes and a limiting of themselves.
“These in turn lead victims to focus on the perpetrators' needs and ignore their own.
“Subtle or covert abuse has the potential to be one of the most damaging of all abuses, and there are no studies solely exploring this kind of abuse.
“It shows that we know very little about a type of abuse that is damaging victims and may be pervasive.”
The review highlights an urgent need for more research on subtle abuse to better understand how to recognise its signs, offer effective support to victims, and to train therapists to spot the signs.
‘Subtle or Covert Abuse within Intimate Partner Relationships: A Scoping Review’ is published in the Sage journal Trauma, Violence and Abuse.
END
New research highlights the overlooked dangers of subtle and covert abuse in intimate relationships
2024-10-09
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Snowflake dance analysis could improve rain forecasts
2024-10-09
The key to more accurate rainfall predictions may lie in the intricate dance of falling snowflakes, a new study has found.
The research, observing the physical motion of falling ice crystals, will help scientists better estimate where and when these crystals will melt into raindrops, a crucial stage in the formation of many types of rain.
Published today (Thursday 10 October) in the journal Atmospheric Chemistry and Physics, the study involved scientists watching how fake snowflakes fell in a substance ...
ASPB welcomes Hong Ma as Society President
2024-10-09
ASPB is delighted to welcome its new President, Hong Ma, who was elected in 2023 as President-elect and served in this role starting October 1, 2023. He stepped into his role as ASPB President on October 1, 2024 following the end of now-Past President Leeann Thornton’s term.
“A top priority is to support and train young plant biologists toward becoming members of a community with greater diversity, to amplify the voices of diverse members of our society, and to promote diversity and representation in society leadership and society activities,” ...
Can advanced AI can solve visual puzzles and perform abstract reasoning?
2024-10-09
Artificial Intelligence has learned to master language, generate art, and even beat grandmasters at chess. But can it crack the code of abstract reasoning—those tricky visual puzzles that leave humans scratching their heads? Researchers at USC Viterbi School of Engineering Information Sciences Institute (ISI) are putting AI’s cognitive abilities to the test, pushing the multi-modal large language models (MLLMs) to solve visual problems once reserved for human IQ tests. The result? A glimpse into how far AI has come—and where it still stumbles.
USC Viterbi ISI Research ...
West Health-Gallup poll: Healthcare may be sleeper issue in U.S. presidential campaign
2024-10-09
WASHINGTON, D.C. – Oct. 9, 2024 – Though in this year’s presidential election healthcare has seemingly taken a back to other issues including the economy and democracy, nearly eight in 10 registered voters still say the issue that has been critical in nearly every presidential campaign in modern history, remains extremely (37%) or very important (42%) to whom they cast their vote, according to a new a West Health-Gallup poll of voters. This sentiment is consistent with what’s been expressed in most previous elections, although slightly more ...
UC Irvine scientists track and analyze lofted embers that cause spot fires
2024-10-09
Irvine, Calif., Oct. 9, 2024 — In the chaos of a wildfire, heat, wind, flames and fuel interact to produce embers that are lofted into surrounding areas, starting new spot fires and spreading destruction and property loss in California’s wildland-urban interface. Researchers at the University of California, Irvine have conducted first-of-their-kind field experiments to better understand the physics of these firebrands, and their results can help authorities better model the outcomes of disasters that are happening with greater frequency in a warming climate.
In a paper published recently in the journal Physics of Fluids, UC Irvine team members describe their ...
Uncovering pandemic inequities
2024-10-09
More than four years after the COVID-19 pandemic caused the world to come to a standstill, lessons in pandemic response are still being learned. What we know: the global pandemic disproportionately affected racial and ethnic minority groups across the U.S., with Black and Hispanic individuals being three to four times more likely to die from COVID compared to white individuals.
Daniel Harris, Assistant Professor of Epidemiology in the University of Delaware's College of Health Sciences (CHS), took a deep dive into rarely obtained COVID-19 ...
Microbiome researcher awarded NIH Transformative Research Award to pursue personalized treatment for gut diseases
2024-10-09
Baylor University researcher Aaron Wright, Ph.D., has earned a $5.6 million National Institutes of Health (NIH) Director’s Transformative Research Award for a project that he and collaborators hope could lead to personalized – and revolutionary – treatments for gut microbiome diseases like Irritable Bowel Syndrome (IBS), Crohn’s, Ulcerative Colitis and more. Wright, a nationally recognized microbiome researcher and chemical biologist who serves as The Schofield Endowed Chair in Biomedical Science in Baylor’s Department of Biology, will partner on the project with colleagues from Weill ...
Teresa Bowman, Ph.D., named Chair of Developmental & Molecular Biology at Albert Einstein College of Medicine
2024-10-09
October 9, 2024—(BRONX, NY)—Stem cell researcher Teresa Bowman, Ph.D., has been appointed chair of the department of developmental & molecular biology (DMB) at Albert Einstein College of Medicine after a comprehensive national search. Dr. Bowman will begin her new role on December 1, following the longtime leadership of Richard Stanley, Ph.D.
“Dr. Bowman has demonstrated her leadership abilities, commitment to mentorship, and dedication to the College of Medicine since she ...
Legal system fails to protect people from malicious copyright cases at the cost of sexual privacy, study warns
2024-10-09
Changes need to be made to the UK legal system to protect people from exploitative litigation designed to prey on vulnerabilities, a new study warns.
Reforms need to be made to protect adults from unfairness during copyright enforcement legal proceedings. This would also help to prevent children being exposed to adult pornography online.
The malicious litigation typically involves copyright holders or their agents of online pornographic works obtaining contact details of internet users via a court order to ...
Ancient climate analysis reveals unknown global processes
2024-10-09
According to highly cited conventional models, cooling and a major drop in sea levels about 34 million years ago should have led to widespread continental erosion and deposited gargantuan amounts of sandy material onto the ocean floor. This was, after all, one of the most drastic climate transitions on Earth since the demise of the dinosaurs.
Yet a new Stanford review of hundreds of studies going back decades contrastingly reports that across the margins of all seven continents, little to no sediment has ever been found dating back to this transition. The discovery of this globally extensive gap in the geologic record was published this week in Earth-Science Reviews.
“The ...