PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Working couples face greater odds of intimate partner violence

2012-11-30
(Press-News.org) HUNTSVILLE, TX (11/30/12) -- Intimate partner violence is two times more likely to occur in two income households, compared to those where only one partner works, a recent study at Sam Houston State University found. The study, conducted by Cortney A. Franklin and Tasha A. Menaker and supported by the Crime Victims' Institute, was titled, "Differences in Education/Employment Status and Intimate Partner Victimization." It looked at the impact of education levels and employment status differences among heterosexual partners on intimate partner victimization. While differences in education levels appeared to have little influence on intimate partner violence, when both partners were working, intimate partner violence increased. "When both male and females were employed, the odds of victimization were more than two times higher than when the male was the only breadwinner in the partnership, lending support to the idea that female employment may challenge male authority and power in a relationship," said Franklin and Menaker. The study was based on telephone interviews with 303 women who identified themselves as either currently or recently in a serious romantic relationship. Based on the Fourth Annual Texas Crime Victimization Survey, a total of 67 percent of these women, who ranged in age from 18 to 81, reported some form of physical or psychological victimization by their partner during the preceding two year period. These actions included having something thrown at them; being pushed, grabbed or shoved; slapped, hit, kicked or bitten; or threatened with a gun or knife. The study found that more than 60 percent of women in heterosexual working couples reported victimization, while only 30 percent of women reported victimization in cases when only the male partner was employed. "When women are home-bound through their role as domestic workers, they lack connections to co-workers and the social capital that is produced through those connections, in addition to wages, job prestige, resources, and thus, power. In turn, they must rely solely on their male partner for financial sustenance and can benefit from the distinction that his employment brings the couple," said Franklin and Menaker. "Those women who work outside the home have access to these tangible and intangible assets, which may devalue or, in some cases, even undermine the contributions and provisions supplied by male-only employment." The study also explored other factors that may contribute to intimate partner violence, including witnessing violence by a parent during childhood, accepting the use of violence in adult relationships, and experiencing relationship distress, such as problems generated by money, chores, social activities or sexual relations. Distress in the relationship and witnessing intimate partner violence during childhood increased the odds of victimization. Finally, the study found that Hispanic women were significantly less likely than white females to report intimate partner violence and that older women of all races/ethnicities were less likely to be victimized than younger women. As a result of these findings, Franklin and Menaker recommended that clinicians who treat victims of intimate partner violence develop specific strategies to address these risk factors and cultural differences. The study also suggested that clinicians should target youth who have witnessed violence during childhood with additional programming for better methods of conflict resolution among adults in intimate relationships. The full study is scheduled to be published in the journal, Violence Against Women, in the near future.

### END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Proteins that work at the ends of DNA could provide cancer insight

Proteins that work at the ends of DNA could provide cancer insight
2012-11-30
CHAMPAIGN, lll. — New insights into a protein complex that regulates the very tips of chromosomes could improve methods of screening anti-cancer drugs. Led by bioengineering professor Sua Myong, the research group's findings are published in the journal Structure. Myong's group focused on understanding the proteins that protect and regulate telomeres, segments of repeating DNA units that cap the ends of chromosomes. Telomeres protect the important gene-coding sections of DNA from loss or damage, the genetic equivalent of aglets – the covering at the tips of shoelaces ...

Defining career paths in health systems improvement

Defining career paths in health systems improvement
2012-11-30
The sheer number of efforts aimed at improving the quality and efficiency of the U.S. health care system – ranging from portions of the national Affordable Care Act to local programs at individual hospitals and practices – reflects the urgency and importance of the task. One aspect that has received inadequate attention, according to three physicians writing in the January 2013 issue of Academic Medicine, is training the next generation of experts needed to help lead these efforts. In their Perspective article, which has been released online, the authors propose a framework ...

More evidence for an ancient Grand Canyon

2012-11-30
PASADENA, Calif.—For over 150 years, geologists have debated how and when one of the most dramatic features on our planet—the Grand Canyon—was formed. New data unearthed by researchers at the California Institute of Technology (Caltech) builds support for the idea that conventional models, which say the enormous ravine is 5 to 6 million years old, are way off. In fact, the Caltech research points to a Grand Canyon that is many millions of years older than previously thought, says Kenneth A. Farley, Keck Foundation Professor of Geochemistry at Caltech and coauthor of the ...

Marketing analytics ups Fortune 1000 return on assets 8 percent, says operations research study

2012-11-30
Fortune 1000 companies that increase their use of marketing analytics improve their return on assets an average 8% and as much as 21%, with returns ranging from $70 million to $180 million in net income, according to a paper written by two key members of the Institute for Operations Research and the Management Sciences (INFORMS®). The research was conducted by Penn State University Management Science Professor Gary L. Lilien, former president of an INFORMS predecessor society; Arvind Rangaswamy of the Smeal College of Business at Penn State, former president of the INFORMS ...

Brief interventions can help college students return to a healthy lifestyle

Brief interventions can help college students return to a healthy lifestyle
2012-11-30
COLUMBIA, Mo. ¬— The weight gain commonly known as the "Freshman 15" is a negative aspect of the college experience for many college freshmen who are independent for the first time, most making lifestyle decisions about eating and exercise. Researchers say it's no surprise freshmen experience one of the largest weight gains in their lifetimes when they attend college. A new study from the University of Missouri has found that a brief intervention, sometimes as little as 30 minutes, can help put students back on the right track to a healthy lifestyle – a change that can ...

UCLA researchers find evidence for water ice deposits and organic material on Mercury

2012-11-30
Planetary scientists have identified water ice and unusually dark deposits within permanently shadowed areas at Mercury's north pole. Using data collected by NASA's MESSENGER spacecraft, a team from UCLA crafted the first accurate thermal model of the solar system's innermost planet, successfully pinpointing the extremely cold regions where ice has been found on or below the surface. The researchers say the newly discovered black deposits are a thin crust of residual organic material brought to the planet over the past several million years through impacts by water-rich ...

Activating ALC1: With a little help from friends

Activating ALC1: With a little help from friends
2012-11-30
KANSAS CITY, MO –Chromatin remodeling—the packaging and unpackaging of genomic DNA and its associated proteins—regulates a host of fundamental cellular processes including gene transcription, DNA repair, programmed cell death as well as cell fate. In their latest study, scientists at the Stowers Institute for Medical Research are continuing to unravel the finicky details of how these architectural alterations are controlled. Through a series of biochemical experiments, Stowers Investigators Ron Conaway, Ph.D., and Joan Conaway, Ph.D., and their team discovered that chromatin ...

Garbage bug may help lower the cost of biofuel

2012-11-30
One reason that biofuels are expensive to make is that the organisms used to ferment the biomass cannot make effective use of hemicellulose, the next most abundant cell wall component after cellulose. They convert only the glucose in the cellulose, thus using less than half of the available plant material. "Here at the EBI and other places in the biofuel world, people are trying to engineer microbes that can use both," said University of Illinois microbiologist Isaac Cann. "Most of the time what they do is they take genes from different locations and try and stitch all ...

Controversial treatment for autism may do more harm than good, Baylor University researchers find

2012-11-30
ABOUT BAYLOR SCHOOL OF EDUCATION The Baylor School of Education is accredited by the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education and consists of four departments: Curriculum and Instruction (preparation for classroom teachers and specialists); Educational Administration (post-graduate preparation for school leadership); Educational Psychology (undergraduate and graduate programs for those who are interested in learning, development, measurement, and exceptionalities); and Health, Human Performance and Recreation (preparing for sport- and health-related careers, ...

St. Joseph's researchers identify gene involved in lung tumor growth

2012-11-30
(Phoenix, AZ Nov. 27, 2012) – Lung cancer researchers at St. Joseph's Hospital and Medical Center in Phoenix, Ariz., in collaboration with researchers at the Translational Genomics Research Institute and other institutions, have identified a gene that plays a role in the growth and spread of non-small cell lung cancer tumors, opening the door for potential new treatment options. The study, titled "Elevated Expression of Fn14 in Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer Correlates with Activated EGFR and Promotes Tumor Cell Migration and Invasion," was published in the May 2012 issue ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Be careful trusting TikTok for gout advice

A study by the University of Seville links the vanishing of the specific heats at absolute zero with the principle of entropy increase

Anxiety and insomnia may lower natural killer cell count, potentially repressing immune function

How parasitic, asexual plants evolve and live

Research spotlight: A subset of patients with depression could benefit from anti-inflammatory treatment

New fully digital design paves the way for scalable probabilistic computing

Membrane electrode assembly design for high-efficiency anion exchange membrane water electrolysis

U.S. debt ceiling disputes show measurable impact on global crude oil markets

Climate extremes triggered rare coral disease and mass mortality on the Great Barrier Reef

Direct observation reveals “two-in-one” roles of plasma turbulence

Humans rank between meerkats and beavers in monogamy ‘league table’

US fossil reveals early mass-burial event and ancient microbial attack

Sedative choice could improve outcomes for breathing tube patients

New superconducting thin film for quantum computer chips

Simulations reveal protein "dynamin" constricts cell membranes by loosening its grip

Nearly 1 in 5 UK emergency department patients cared for in corridors/waiting rooms

Heavy energy drink intake may pose serious stroke risk, doctors warn

Violence against women and children among top health threats: New global study reveals disease burden far larger than previously estimated

Predicting who is at risk of developing type 1 diabetes, as new drugs now available

New gene-mapping method unlocks hidden drivers of cancer

Ocean current and seabed shape influence warm water circulation under ice shelves

Call to increase funding for ‘invisible’ Deaf victim-survivors of domestic abuse

University of Maryland School of Medicine names distinguished scientist and academic leader Gerald M. Wilson, PhD, as Chair of the Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology

Receptors in mammary glands make livestock and humans inviting hosts for avian flu

Icy hot plasmas

Treating adults with autism: Maryland Clinical Center offers national blueprint for care after pediatric transition

University of Phoenix College of Doctoral Studies releases white paper on reclaiming control to build workforce resilience

NCCN Summit seeks to improve care for veterans and first responders with cancer from line-of-duty exposure

ERC Consolidator Grant for soft robotics researcher

Dual-action arts and wellbeing program transforms dementia care

[Press-News.org] Working couples face greater odds of intimate partner violence