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Review

Intimate Partner Violence: A Bibliometric Review of Literature

1
Institute of Information Resource, Zhejiang University of Technology, Hangzhou 310014, China
2
Library, Zhejiang University of Technology, Hangzhou 310014, China
*
Author to whom correspondence should be addressed.
Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2020, 17(15), 5607; https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17155607
Submission received: 3 June 2020 / Revised: 24 July 2020 / Accepted: 28 July 2020 / Published: 4 August 2020

Abstract

:
Intimate partner violence (IPV) is a worldwide public health problem. Here, a bibliometric analysis is performed to evaluate the publications in the Intimate Partner Violence (IPV) field from 2000 to 2019 based on the Science Citation Index (SCI) Expanded and the Social Sciences Citation Index (SSCI) databases. This work presents a detailed overview of IPV from aspects of types of articles, citations, h-indices, languages, years, journals, institutions, countries, and author keywords. The results show that the USA takes the leading position in this research field, followed by Canada and the U.K. The University of North Carolina has the most publications and Harvard University has the first place in terms of h-index. The London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine leads the list of average citations per paper. The Journal of Interpersonal Violence, Journal of Family Violence and Violence Against Women are the top three most productive journals in this field, and Psychology is the most frequently used subject category. Keywords analysis indicates that, in recent years, most research focuses on the research fields of “child abuse”, “pregnancy”, “HIV”, “dating violence”, “gender-based violence” and “adolescents”.

1. Introduction

Intimate partner violence (IPV) is a common and worldwide health concern [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8]. According to the World Health Organization (WHO), IPV includes “any behavior by an intimate partner or ex-partner that causes physical, sexual or psychological harm, including acts of physical aggression, sexual coercion, psychological abuse and controlling behaviors” [9]. According to a WHO report in 2013 [10], over one in three women worldwide have experienced physical and/or sexual partner violence, or sexual violence by a non-partner. IPV levels vary in different regions due to a variety of cultural, economic level, social system, and religious reasons, with the highest prevalence in Africa, the Eastern Mediterranean and the South–East Asia Regions, followed by the Americas. High-income regions, the European and the Western Pacific Regions have a relatively low prevalence [10]. Since IPV is associated with many serious physical and mental health consequences: physical injury [11,12,13,14], post-traumatic stress disorder [15,16,17], HIV infections [18,19,20,21], induced abortion [22,23,24], alcohol use disorders [25,26,27,28,29], adolescent pregnancy [30,31,32,33], dating violence [30,34,35,36,37], and more, scholars from many countries have been participating in the study of IPV and how to prevent the violence [38,39,40,41,42,43,44].
According to the literature, America is the earliest region to study IPV. E.J. Alpert. proposed in 1995 that physicians can play an important role in the early intervention of IPV through querying women who were treated for emergency care [45]. Over the ensuing few years, many strategies were proposed to prevent IPV, such as training programs [46], abuse screening [7,38,40], and reducing poverty and alcohol consumption [41]. Since the WHO released the “World report on violence and health” in 2002, more and more countries joined the IPV research. The collaborations between regions or countries also are increasing.
Recently, bibliometric analysis has been an effective tool to quantitatively analyze academic publications to evaluate the research trends in different research fields, such as health care science services [47,48,49,50,51], Psychology [52,53], Economics [54,55], Energy [11,51,56,57] and Ecology [58,59]. Bibliometrics, first proposed by Alan Pritchard in a paper in 1969, is defined as “the application of mathematics and statistical methods to books and other media of communication” [60]. To our knowledge, this is the first time assessing the IPV research field using bibliometric methods. The aim of this research is to provide a broad overview on the IPV research area, including the following aspects: (1) the main contributors: country, institute, research group; (2) collaboration patterns: cooperation between countries; (3) the most productive journals; (4) top papers with highest citation numbers; (5) research trends by analyzing the author keywords. This study demonstrates the research focuses and hotspots of IPV research, which enable readers to understand the trajectories, key elements on the theoretical and practical contributions, and the future challenges of IPV.

2. Methods

The analysis was based on the papers related to “Intimate Partner Violence” which were obtained from the Science Citation Index-Expanded (SCI-E) and Social Sciences Citation Index (SSCI) during the period from 2000 to 2019. The data was retrieved through the “Web of Science Core collection” by searching the title, abstract, author keywords and KeyWords plus with the search formula of “Intimate partner violence” or “Intimate partner abuse” or “spous* violence” or “spous* abuse” or “wife violence” or “wife abuse” or “husband violence” or “husband abuse” on 20 July 2020. The data of the top 25 authors in “Intimate Partner Violence” and citation analyses were acquired on 20 July 2020. Keywords and international cooperation were analyzed using the Derwent Data Analyzer (DDA) software. The Impact Factor (IF) for each journal was determined according to the report from the 2019 Journal Citation Reports (JCR). Note that some related publications that do not use the above search formula may not be included in this analysis.

3. Results

3.1. Number and Types of Publications

All told, 13,515 papers met the search criteria mentioned above, including 13 article types. They were: articles (11,450), reviews (925), meeting abstracts (550), editorial materials (333), proceedings papers (278), early access (188), letters (94), corrections (41), book reviews (32), book chapters (19), news items (9), reprints (4) and a retracted publication (1). The vast majority of articles and reviews were published in English (12,044; 97.325%), followed by Spanish (180; 1.445%), Portuguese (65; 0.525%), German (32; 0.259%), French (20; 0.162%), Turkish (14; 0.113%), Slovenian (6; 0.048%), Italian (4; 0.032%), Croatian (4; 0.032%), Polish (2; 0.016%), Korean (1; 0.008%), Afrikaans (1; 0.008%) and Hungarian (1; 0.008%). The following analysis was only based on the articles and reviews which were the majority of the publications in this field. Figure 1 shows the annual analysis of published papers and the number of countries. It is clear that the number of annual publications and countries have been increasing at a relatively high rate since 2002. This is attributed possibly to the report from the WHO [9]. Until 2019, 151 countries or regions have participated in IPV research.
The top 30 most productive countries in the IPV research field are shown in Table 1. The USA led the list with the most publications (7947) and highest h-index (149). Canada was in the second position, but the amount of publications is only 12% of that from the USA. Other productive countries include the UK (899), Australia (631), Spain (554), South Africa (513), and Sweden (352). Switzerland took the first position of average citations per paper (71.73). The UK is listed in the second position (29.72), followed by South Africa (29.04), Uganda (24.39), the USA (24.19), India (23.29) and Bangladesh (22.06).

3.2. Cooperation of Countries

Shown in Table 1, all the countries from Africa had a very high share of internationally collaborative papers, especially Kenya and Uganda. Ten European countries held a relatively high share of cooperative publications. Especially, Switzerland had an 84.17% share of co-author papers with other countries or regions. It is worth mentioning that, although the USA was the most active country—collaborating with 119 other countries or regions—over 80% of the papers published independently were from the USA. Altogether, most productive countries had frequent cooperation with other countries or regions.
The academic collaboration network of the top 15 most productive countries is shown in Figure 2. Derwent Data Analyzer (DDA) software was applied to draw the network diagram on the basis of a co-occurrence matrix. The size of the nodes is according to the number of publications and the thickness of the connecting lines represent the frequency of cooperation. It is clearly demonstrated that the USA cooperated most frequently with South Africa, India, the UK, and Switzerland with strong collaboration relationships. Furthermore, the USA, the UK, Australia, South Africa, Germany, and Switzerland had the biggest collaboration network within the top 15 most productive countries.

3.3. Contribution of Leading Institutes

A total of 6684 institutes have participated in the study of IPV. The top 20 productive institutes, which were from the top four most productive countries, are shown in Table 2. Among them, seventeen institutes are located in the USA, one in the Canada, the UK and Australia respectively, which indicates again that the USA dominates the IPV research area. The University of North Carolina ranks first in terms of total publications, followed by Johns Hopkins University and the University of Michigan. The London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine holds the first position for average citations per paper (ACCP). Harvard University has the highest h-index value. It is worth noting that there is no institute from Asia, Africa or Oceania on this list. We expect more countries will increase their funding input and strengthen international and domestic cooperation to prevent IPV.
Additionally, we analyzed the share of cooperative publications between institutes (see Table 2). It can be seen that all 20 of the most productive institutions have very high collaboration rates, especially the University of California-San Diego and Harvard University. It suggests that IPV research requires the cooperation of multiple institutions such as: universities, hospitals, and sectors of government and non-government.

3.4. Contribution of Leading Authors

The top 25 most productive authors are shown in Table 3, based on the number of publications. J.C. Campbell led the list with 151 papers followed by J.G. Silverman (94) and G.L. Stuart. (87). Regarding the average citation per paper, C. Watts ranked first with 71.92 followed by R. Caetano (64.27), and R. Jewkes (62.19). The highest h-index was achieved by J.C. Campbell (43). Among these top 25 productive authors, 18 authors were in the USA, two in the UK and Spain, and one in Canada, South Africa, and Australia, respectively.

3.5. Contribution of Leading Research Areas and Journals

Twelve thousand three hundred and seventy-five papers related to IPV have been published in about 103 research areas in SCI and SSCI databases, among which the top 20 are listed in Table 4. ‘Psychology’ ranked in the first position in terms of the total publications and h-index, followed by ‘Family Studies’, Public Environmental Occupational Health’ and ‘Criminology Penology’. ‘General Internal Medicine’ led the list of the ACCP (45.38), followed by ‘Neurosciences Neurology’, and ‘Pediatrics’.
The 12,375 papers related to IPV research during 2000–2019 were published in 1454 journals. The top 50 journals in terms of the number of total publications are shown in Table 5. Approximately 48% of the papers were published in these top 50 productive journals. The top five journals produced 2590 papers with a 21.15% share of the publications. A bubble chart of the top 50 productive journals by year is shown in Figure 3. The Journal of Interpersonal Violence, the Journal of Family Violence and Violence Against Women were the top three most productive journals, with a sharp increase in IPV research outputs during the last decade. It can be clearly seen that there were few articles sparsely distributed in most of the top 50 journals from 2000–2007, however, there has been a rapid growth in publications since 2008. It is clear to see that more and more research workers have contributed to the ‘International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health’. It is worth noting that Lancet (IF = 60.392), one of the most authoritative academic journals in the world medical community and one of the most influential SCI journals, is in the 46th position on the list. This suggests that IPV is a popular and important research area.

3.6. An Analysis of Keywords

To elucidate the main focus and research trend of IPV research, 10,085 author keywords from 12,375 papers were analyzed. The raw data were cleaned to ensure that keywords with the same meanings were represented by one unified word. Among the author keywords, 6794 (68%) were used only once and 1279 (13%) used twice. However, the top 30 most used author keywords appeared 16,614 (35%) times. The large number of once-only author keywords may indicate a wide range of interests in IPV research. As a bubble chart can clearly express in 3D values, using the bubble size as the third dimension, one can be applied to track research frontiers [51,61,62,63]. The top 30 author keywords by year are shown in Figure 4. Using visual bubble charts, the development trend of research can be clearly presented. Note that the number on the bubble represents author keyword occurrence frequencies and the number of publications.

3.7. An Analysis of the Most Cited Papers

Although the citation impact of a paper depends on many factors [64], it is still a measure of its influence in this research field. The top 20 most highly cited publications are presented in Table 6. The most highly cited paper was “Health consequences of intimate partner violence.” published in the Lancet by Campbell, J.C. It led the list of total times cited with 1865 and held the second position for annual citations. “The Epidemiology of Depression Across Cultures” [65], authored by Kessler and Bromet, took the first position for annual citations with 128.00. “Prevalence of intimate partner violence: findings from the WHO multi-country study on women’s health and domestic violence” authored by Garcia–Moreno, C., et al., ranked in the third position with annual citations of 106.46.
Among these top 20 papers, eight were published in Lancet, and one in Psychological Bulletin, the American Journal of Preventive Medicine, the Annual Review of Public Health, Jama-Journal of the American Medical Association, the Clinical Psychology Review, the Archives of Family Medicine, the Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, Pediatrics, Child Abuse and Neglect, Aggression and Violent Behavior, the Archives of Internal Medicine, and the Bulletin of The World Health Organization, respectively. The USA contributed nine of them, followed by South Africa (4), Switzerland (3) Canada (2), Australia (1) and Ireland (1), and again indicated that the USA was the leading country in this research field. It is worth noting that three papers from South Africa were related to the study of the relationships between IPV and HIV infection and prevention in South Africa. Through analyzing the publications about IPV, we found that 1547 papers were associated with HIV research and a 34% share of the publications was related to Africa. It suggested that more and more scholars agree that HIV and IPV are related to some extent [19,21,66,67,68].

4. Discussion

One hundred and fifty-one countries contributed 12,357 publications to Intimate Partner Violence (IPV) research from 2000 to 2019, indicating that IPV is a global public health problem and attracting worldwide attention. It is clear that the number of publications has increased steadily since the WHO released the first World Report on Violence and Health in 2002. The number of papers from 2010–2019 was 9884, which represented 80% of the total number of publications. Also, the number of countries which were involved in IPV research increased every year, except for several fluctuations, which indicates that more and more countries have put their efforts to study and prevent IPV.
North America, Western Europe, and Australia were the most active regions in the research of IPV. This was further confirmed by the most active institutions and authors. There was no institute from Asia and Africa in the top 20 most productive institutions. China and India, as the world’s most populous countries, had very low productivity. One possible reason might be the traditional culture difference, funding input, and economic level. Another possible reason is that while the WoS database is comprehensive, some journals published from India, China, and other Asian and African countries are not indexed in WoS. Furthermore, as most SCI papers are published in English, some non-native English-speaking researchers might not produce high quality papers due to the language problem to some extent. These thoughts might explain the low productivity from Asia and Africa.
The obvious change in the number on the bubble of the author keywords showed the trend of IPV research: “intimate partner violence” (4399 times) was the most frequently used keyword and increased sharply during the last ten years (2008–2019), followed by “domestic violence” (2166 times), “child abuse” (985 times), “violence” (650 times), “sexual violence” (611 times), and “HIV/AIDs” (605 times). It is worth mentioning that, among the top 30 author keywords, five were related to “woman”, including “women”, “pregnancy” “violence against women”, “battered women” and “women’s health” and two were related to adolescents and children, including “adolescents” and “child abuse”, which indicates that the biggest victims of IPV are women and children. Studies on the impact of children and young adolescent’s exposure to IPV have attracted great attention from the scholars over the last two decades [33,34,36,69,70]. This trend reflects on the one-in-four of the total 12,357 papers being related to children. Additionally, “child abuse” “pregnancy”, “HIV”, “dating violence”, “gender-based violence” and “adolescents” were used at a very low frequency during 2000–2007 but increased rapidly during the last decade, which might be the new emerging research direction.
The top 20 cited publications are shown in Table 6. The article with the highest citation was a review article published in 2002 and discussed the increased health problems caused by IPV [14]. Overall, five papers were published in 2002. Therefore, 2002 was a milestone year in IPV research. The article “The world report on violence and health” analyzed and summarized the main points of the first report on violence and health released by the WHO in 2002 [4]. “Prevalence of intimate partner violence: findings from the WHO multi-country study on women’s health and domestic violence” was published in Lancet in 2006 and discussed the prevalence of IPV in 10 mainly low and middle-income countries [5]. The report, “Prevalence and health effects of intimate partner violence and non-partner sexual violence”, was released by the WHO in 2013 and demonstrated that 30% of all women from over 80 countries have experienced violence by an intimate partner [10]. The WHO, with other agencies, launched a RESPECT women program to prevent violence against women in 2019 [71].

5. Conclusions

Here, we presented a general overview of the Intimate Partner Violence (IPV) research area in terms of leading countries, institutes, and research trends. The USA definitely led IPV research with the most publications and highest h-index. There was no doubt that more and more countries have been participating in IPV research. Since IPV is a world health issue, we expect that, as more and more researchers join this research area, more results will be published based on the collaboration between different research groups all over the world, which will continue to make an effort to stop or prevent IPV. Needless to say, how to prevent IPV more effectively is still a big challenge, although many scholars have made various suggestions to intervene or stop IPV. Furthermore, more and more researchers have recognized that IPV is associated with women’s vulnerability to HIV. We expect more research will focus on these areas.
This study can help potential researchers to quickly understand IPV globally. It also can provide useful information for relevant research in terms of identifying the research trends and potential collaborators, for example. Additionally, this study can help policy makers improve policymaking to prevent IPV.

Author Contributions

Author Contributions: Y.W. (Yuehua Wan) designed the study. J.C. and H.F. responsible for data collection. Y.W. (Yanqi Wu) analyzed, interpreted the data, and wrote the manuscript. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.

Funding

This research was funded by Humanity and Social Science Project of Zhejiang Education Department (Y201738172) and Zhejiang Provincial Natural Science Foundation of China (LS18G03012).

Conflicts of Interest

The authors declare no conflict of interest.

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Figure 1. The number of the publication and number of countries by year.
Figure 1. The number of the publication and number of countries by year.
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Figure 2. Collaborative relationships among the top 15 most productive countries.
Figure 2. Collaborative relationships among the top 15 most productive countries.
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Figure 3. Bubble chart of the Top 50 productive journals by year.
Figure 3. Bubble chart of the Top 50 productive journals by year.
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Figure 4. Bubble chart of top 30 author keywords by year.
Figure 4. Bubble chart of top 30 author keywords by year.
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Table 1. Contribution and impact of the top 30 most productive countries in Intimate Partner Violence (IPV) research.
Table 1. Contribution and impact of the top 30 most productive countries in Intimate Partner Violence (IPV) research.
RankCountryTPTCACCPh-IndexSP (%)nCCRegion
1USA7947196,71124.7514919.51119Americas
2Canada97119,66620.256544.2872Americas
3UK89926,71829.727161.0790Europe
4Australia63111,55518.314546.5965Oceania
5Spain554575610.393430.6946Europe
6South Africa51314,89629.045471.7360Africa
7Sweden352536715.253356.2560Europe
8P.R. China220308114.002950.9135Asia
9Brazil218290113.312533.9429Americas
10India200465823.293774.5030Asia
11Netherlands181297016.412648.6235Europe
12Israel166240214.472535.5423Asia
13Germany159243115.292365.4145Europe
14Norway127213616.822355.1237Europe
15Switzerland120860871.733684.1747Europe
16Italy117146012.481961.5443Europe
17New Zealand104201719.342436.5419Oceania
18Uganda103251224.392595.1426Africa
19Turkey1028097.931517.658Asia
20Kenya96153616.002096.8829Africa
21Mexico95118812.511969.4719Americas
22South Korea876877.901456.329Asia
23Bangladesh85187522.062181.1817Asia
24Japan7989911.381548.1018Asia
25Nigeria75111514.871958.6730Africa
26Tanzania7085812.261892.8628Africa
27Portugal675257.841246.2721Europe
28Ethiopia6486113.451765.0825Africa
29Belgium5694916.951662.5035Europe
30Chile5252410.081382.6920Americas
Note: TP total paper, TC total citations, ACCP average citations per paper, SP Share of publications. nCC number of cooperative countries or regions.
Table 2. The Top 20 most productive institutions for publications, citations, and h-indices during 2000–2019.
Table 2. The Top 20 most productive institutions for publications, citations, and h-indices during 2000–2019.
InstitutionsTPTCACCPh-IndexSP (%)Country
University of North Carolina34811,97034.405575.29USA
Johns Hopkins University33713,42739.845989.61USA
University of Michigan295636121.413781.02USA
Columbia University282715825.384590.07USA
Boston University281922532.835293.95USA
Emory University280742026.504082.86USA
Harvard University26013,42551.636098.85USA
University of Washington250811232.454884.40USA
University of California San Francisco228556724.423890.79USA
University of Toronto223488221.893590.58Canada
Yale University215414619.283485.58USA
Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health192408421.273491.67USA
London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine19010,57555.664592.11UK
Michigan State University188357419.013165.96USA
University of Pittsburgh174386822.233687.93USA
Ctr Dis Control & Prevent171677239.603569.01USA
University of California San Diego171464327.153698.83USA
University of Pennsylvania168355321.153286.31USA
University of Illinois161324120.133276.40USA
University of Melbourne157288918.402887.90Australia
Note: TP total paper, TPR% the percentage of articles or journals in total publications, TC total citations, ACCP average citations per paper, SP Share of publications.
Table 3. Contribution of the top 25 authors in IPV research.
Table 3. Contribution of the top 25 authors in IPV research.
RankAuthorTPTPR%TCACCPh-IndexInstitute (Current), Country
1Campbell, J.C.1511.233831055.0341Johns Hopkins University, USA
2Silverman, J.G.940.768498353.0136Harvard University, USA
3Stuart, G.L.870.710261530.0628The University of Tennessee, USA
4Decker, M.R.860.702375143.6235Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, USA
5Jewkes, R.790.645491362.1930South African Medical Research Council, South Africa
6Raj, A.780.637397851.0032University of California San Diego, USA
7Miller, E.710.580203728.6925University of Pittsburgh, USA
8Vives-Cases, C.640.52372811.3814University of Alicante, Spain
9Shorey, R. C.620.506126120.3417Ohio University, USA
10O’Campo, R.610.498266542.9826St Michaels Hospital, Toronto, Canada
11Watts, C.600.490431571.9230London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine, UK
12Caetano, R.590.482379264.2736Pacific Institute for Research and Evaluation, USA
13Feder, G560.457186233.2520University of Bristol, UK
14Graham-Bermann, S.A.550.449105519.1818University of Michigan, USA
15Yount, K.M.550.44984315.3319Emory University, USA
16Cerulli, C.540.44190416.7415University of Rochester, USA
17El-Bassel, N.540.441148427.4821Columbia University, USA
18Lila, M.530.43373713.9117University of Valencia, Spain
19McFarlane, J.530.43386216.2613Texas Woman’s University, USA
20Glass, N.520.425146328.1317Johns Hopkins, USA
21Hegarty, K520.425112621.6516University of Melbourne, Australia
22Stephenson, R510.416114422.4317University of Michigan, USA
23Kaslow, N.J.500.408139127.8221Emory University, USA
24Gilbert, L480.392145030.2120Columbia University, USA
25Sullivan, T.P.470.38468714.6214Yale University, USA
Note: TP total paper, TPR% the percentage of articles of journals in total publications, TC total citations, ACCP average citations per paper.
Table 4. Contribution of the Top 20 research areas in IPV research.
Table 4. Contribution of the Top 20 research areas in IPV research.
Research AreasTPTCACCPh-Index
Psychology426283,59219.61105
Family Studies267050,49318.9187
Public Environmental Occupational Health260861,01823.40102
Criminology Penology225340,51017.9881
Women’s Studies118221,81218.4562
Psychiatry115922,23919.1966
Social Work91117,61419.3365
General Internal Medicine83737,98345.3887
Nursing581628910.8235
Obstetrics Gynecology56912,28421.5952
Biomedical Social Sciences46312,26926.5058
Substance Abuse365898324.6150
Health Care Sciences Services361552115.2937
Pediatrics268724327.0346
Social Sciences Other Topics220289713.1727
Science Technology Other Topics219367316.7732
Infectious Diseases198510925.8039
Neurosciences Neurology194631732.5642
Sociology186345918.6033
Government Law180191410.6323
Note: TP total paper, TPR% the percentage of share publications, TC total citations, ACCP average citations per paper.
Table 5. Contribution of the top 50 most productive Journals in IPV research.
Table 5. Contribution of the top 50 most productive Journals in IPV research.
No. Journal Name IF2019 No. Journal Name IF2019
1Journal of Interpersonal Violence3.57326Psychological Trauma Theory Research Practice and Policy2.595
2Journal of Family Violence1.35727Women’s Health1.095
3Violence against Women1.79728American Journal of Community Psychology1.509
4Violence and Victims0.59829Global Public Health1.791
5Plos One2.74030Journal of Adolescent Health3.900
6BMC Public Health2.52131Aggressive Behavior2.219
7Child Abuse Neglect2.56932BMC Pregnancy and Childbirth2.239
8Aggression and Violent Behavior2.89333Journal of Traumatic Stress1.926
9Trauma Violence Abuse6.32534Aids Care-Psychological and Socio-Medical Aspects of Aids/HIV1.894
10Psychology of Violence2.38135Journal of Urban Health Bulletin of The New York Academy of Medicine2.356
11Journal of Women’s Health1.93336Sex Roles2.409
12Aids and Behavior3.14737International Journal of Gynecology Obstetrics2.216
13Social Science Medicine3.61638Journal of Clinical Nursing1.972
14Journal of Aggression Maltreatment Trauma1.03039Archives of Women’s Mental Health2.500
15American Journal of Public Health6.46440Pediatrics5.359
16Women’s Health Issues2.35541Journal of Youth and Adolescence3.121
17BMJ Open2.49642Jaids-Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes3.475
18Maternal and Child Health Journal1.89043Jognn Journal of Obstetric Gynecologic and Neonatal Nursing1.250
19American Journal of Preventive Medicine4.42044Global Health Action2.162
20Children and Youth Services Review1.52145Journal of Marriage and Family2.215
21Health Care for Women International0.97046Lancet60.392
22BMC Women’s Health1.54447International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health2.849
23Affilia Journal of Women and Social Work1.08548International Journal of Offender Therapy and Comparative Criminology1.026
24Culture Health Sexuality1.96949Journal of Affective Disorders3.892
25Journal of Family Psychology1.84050Psychology of Women Quarterly2.444
Note: IF: impact factor.
Table 6. The Top 20 most cited publications in IPV research field during 2000–2019.
Table 6. The Top 20 most cited publications in IPV research field during 2000–2019.
NoAuthorsTitleTotal CitationCitation/YearJournal/IF2019Publication YearCountry (Reprint Address)
1Campbell, J.C.Health consequences of intimate partner violence.1865109.71Lancet/60.3922002USA
2Garcia-Moreno, C.; Jansen, H.A.F.M.; Ellsberg, M.; et al.Prevalence of intimate partner violence: Findings from the WHO multi-country study on women’s health and domestic violence.1384106.46Lancet/60.3922006Switzerland
3Archer, J.Sex differences in aggression between heterosexual partners: A meta-analytic review.135071.05Psychological Bulletin/20.8502007Canada
4Coker, A.L.; Davis, K.E.; Arias, I.Physical and mental health effects of intimate partner violence for men and women.116968.76American Journal of Preventive Medicine/4.4202002USA
5Krug, E.G.; Mercy, J.A.; Dahlberg, L.L.; et al.The world report on violence and health.94855.76Lancet/60.3922002Switzerland
6Ellsberg, M.; Jansen, H.A.F.M.; Heise, L.; et al.Intimate partner violence and women’s physical and mental health in the WHO multi-country study on women’s health and domestic violence: An observational study.89181.00Lancet/60.3922008Switzerland
7Jewkes, R.Intimate partner violence: Causes and prevention.81447.88Lancet/60.3922002South Africa
8Dunkle, K.L; Jewkes, R.K.; Brown, H.C.; et al.Gender-based violence, relationship power, and risk of HIV infection in women attending antenatal clinics in South Africa.79753.13Lancet/60.3922004South Africa
9Kessler, R.C., Bromet, E.J.The Epidemiology of Depression Across Cultures768128.00Annual Review of Public Health/16.4632013USA
10Silverman, J. G., Raj, A., Mucci, L. A.; et al.Dating violence against adolescent girls and associated substance use, unhealthy weight control, sexual risk behavior, pregnancy, and suicidality.73540.83Jama-Journal of the American Medical Association/45.5402001USA
11Babcock, J.C.; Green, C.E.; Robie, C.Does batterers’ treatment work? A meta-analytic review of domestic violence treatment68545.67Clinical Psychology Review/10.2252004USA
12Jewkes, R.K.; Dunkle, K.; Nduna, M., et al.Intimate partner violence, relationship power inequity, and incidence of HIV infection in young women in South Africa: A cohort study.65973.22Lancet/60.3922010South Africa
13Shin, L.M.; Rauch, S.L.; Pitman, R.K.Amygdala, medial prefrontal cortex, and hippocampal function in PTSD61443.86Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences/4.7282005USA
14Coker, A.L.; Smith, P.H, Bethea, L.; et al.Physical health consequences of physical and psychological intimate partner violence.61132.16Archives of Family Medicine/2.878 (Year 2002)2000USA
15Tremblay, R.E.; Nagin, D.S.; Seguin, J.R.; et al.Physical aggression during early childhood: Trajectories and predictors57038.00Pediatrics/5.3592004Canada
16Holt, S., Buckley, H., Whelan, S.The impact of exposure to domestic violence on children and young people: A review of the literature.56151.00Child Abuse & Neglect/2.5692008Ireland
17Stith, S.M.; Smith, D.B.; Penn, C.E.Intimate partner physical abuse perpetration and victimization risk factors: A meta-analytic review55637.07Aggression and Violent Behavior/2.8932004USA
18Campbell, J.; Jones, A.S.; Dienemann, J.; et al.Intimate partner violence and physical health consequences. 53631.53Archives of Internal Medicine/17.333 (Year 2014)2002USA
19Fisher, J.; de Mello, M.C.; Patel, V.; et al.Prevalence and determinants of common perinatal mental disorders in women in low- and lower-middle-income countries: A systematic review.52675.14Bulletin of The World Health Organization/6.9602012Australia
20Pronyk, P.M.; Hargreaves, J.R.; Kim, J.C.; et al.Effect of a structural intervention for the prevention of intimate-partner violence and HIV in rural South Africa: a cluster randomised trial.52140.08Lancet/60.3922006South Africa
Note: Total Citation/Year: Total Citation/ (2019-Publication Year).

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Wu, Y.; Chen, J.; Fang, H.; Wan, Y. Intimate Partner Violence: A Bibliometric Review of Literature. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2020, 17, 5607. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17155607

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Wu Y, Chen J, Fang H, Wan Y. Intimate Partner Violence: A Bibliometric Review of Literature. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2020; 17(15):5607. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17155607

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Wu, Yanqi, Jie Chen, Hui Fang, and Yuehua Wan. 2020. "Intimate Partner Violence: A Bibliometric Review of Literature" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 17, no. 15: 5607. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17155607

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Wu, Y., Chen, J., Fang, H., & Wan, Y. (2020). Intimate Partner Violence: A Bibliometric Review of Literature. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 17(15), 5607. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph17155607

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