LGBTIQ CALD People’s Experiences of Intimate Partner Violence: A Systematic Literature Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. LGBTIQ CALD IPV Survivors’ Experiences of Resilience
- When a person is given a sense of purpose;
- Belief in one’s abilities;
- Developing strong social networks;
- Embracing change;
- Being optimistic;
- Nurturing oneself;
- Developing problem-solving skills;
- Establishing goals, taking action, and keep working on their skills.
1.2. Theoretical Framework
1.3. Research Questions
- How do LGBTIQ people experience survivorship and manifestations of resilience, as discussed in the peer-reviewed literature?
- How are experiences of survivorship reported on within studies concerning marginalised LGBTIQ people?
- How are experiences of coping and vulnerability as precursors for survivorship and understandings of resilience for marginalised LGBTIQ people discussed within peer-reviewed literature?
2. Method
2.1. Search Strategy
2.2. Data Synthesis and Interpretation
2.3. Study Quality
3. Results
3.1. Research Foci and Theoretical Approach
3.2. Research Design and Methodology
4. Major Findings
4.1. Intimate Partner Violence as Experienced by LGBTIQ Survivors
4.2. Marginalised LGBTIQ Identity as Experienced by Intimate Partner Violence Survivors
4.3. Types of Survivorship as Experienced by LGBTIQ Survivors
5. Discussion
5.1. Socio-Ecological Factors and LGBTIQ Survivorship
5.2. Self and Micro Levels
5.3. Micro and Meso Levels
5.4. Exo and Macro Levels
6. Limitations
7. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Population | Inclusion | Exclusion | Keywords |
---|---|---|---|
Location | International | Not Applicable | Not Applicable |
Language | Written in English | Other Languages | Select for English Only |
Time | Not Applicable | Not Applicable | Not Applicable |
Population | Publications which focus on: people from minority or marginalized populations who identify as LGBTIQ | Publications which do not focus on: People from minority or marginalized populations who identify as LGBTIQ | TITLE: (lesbian OR gay OR bisexual OR trans* OR intersex OR queer OR LGBT* OR homosexual*Or Gender* OR sexu* OR questioning OR Gender non-conforming) AND Abstract: (Visible minority OR Visual minority OR Culturally and Linguistically Diverse OR Non-White OR ethnic minority OR racial minority OR linguistic minority OR language minority OR English as Second Language OR Language other than English OR Language Background other than English OR English as an Additional Language or Dialect) |
Phenomena/Target | Studies concerned with resilience and intimate partner violence | Studies not concerned with resilience and intimate partner violence | AND Abstract: (resilien* OR surviv* OR grit OR self-control OR agency OR self-sufficiency OR self-determination OR victim* Or coping OR thrive OR endur* adapt* OR fragility OR vulnera* OR weakness OR rigidity) AND TITLE: (Intimate partner violence OR partner violence OR partner abuse OR psychological abuse OR financial abuse OR physical violence OR domestic violence OR family violence) |
Study/Literature Type | Peer-reviewed primary published research academic journals | Literature not included: peer-reviewed primary published research academic journals | Not Applicable |
No# | Author/Year | Country of Study | Sample Size | Demographics of Participants | Type of Violence | Type of Survivorship Discussed | Study Design/Data Collection Method | Data Analysis | Theoretical Approach |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Edwards, Waterman, Ulman, Rodriguez, Dardis & Dworkin (2020) | USA | 1268 participants | LGBT identifying white and non-white minorities, heterosexual participants | Partner violence and sexual violence | Coping | Surveys | Chi-squares and T tests | Supporting survivors and self (SSS), attribution theory and planned behaviour theory |
2 | Pittman, Ridey Rush, Hurley & Minges (2020) | USA | 9435 Participants | Women of colour who identify as sexual minorities (i.e., lesbians, bisexual, etc.) | Intimate partner violence and sexual violence | Vulnerability | Self-elected National Health Assessment Data | t-tests | Intersectionality theory |
3 | Strasser, Smith, Pendrick-Denney, Boos-Beddington, Chen & McCarthy (2012) | USA | 100 Participants | Gay and bisexual males | Intimate partner violence | Coping | Cross-sectional surveys | Chi-square tests | Does not specify |
4 | Whitton, Dyar, Mustanski & Newcomb (2019) | USA | 352 Participants | Age: 16–32 Women assigned female at birth LGBT identifying. From pre-existing cohort study. | Intimate partner violence including coercive control. | Vulnerability | Pre-existing cohort study | Latent class analysis | Minority stress theory |
5 | Lou, Stone & Tharp (2014) | USA | 62,861 Participants | LGBTQ (questioning) white and non-white identifying | Dating violence | Coping | Does not specify | Logistic regression | Does not specify |
Questions | Are the Results of the Study Valid? | Section A: Are the Results of the Study Valid? | Section B: What Are the Results? | Section C: Will the Results Help Locally? | AW | TD | |||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Legend | Y-Yes/CT-Can’t Tell/N-No | Y/CT/N | Y/CT/N | Y/CT/N | Y/CT/N | Y/CT/N | Y/CT/N | Y/CT/N | Y/CT/N | Y/CT/N | Y/CT/N | Y/CT/N | Y/CT/N | Y/CT/N | Y/CT/N | S M W | S M W |
No. (As per Table 2) | Author/Year | Q1. Did the study address a clearly focused issue? | Q2. Was the cohort recruited in an acceptable way? | Q3. Was the exposure accurately measured to minimise bias? | Q4. Was the outcome accurately measured to minimise bias? | Q5A. Have the authors identified all important confounding factors? | Q5B. Have they take account of the confounding factors in the design and/or analysis? | Q6A. Was the follow up of subjects complete enough? | Q6B. Was the follow up of subjects long enough? | Q7. What are the results of this study? | Q8. How precise are the results? | Q9. Do you believe the results? | Q10. Can the results be applied to the local population? | Q11. Do the results of this study fit with other available evidence? | Q12. What are the implications of this study for practice? | ||
1 | Strasser et al., 2012 | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | CT | CT | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | CT | M | M |
2 | Edwards et al., 2021 | Y | Y | CT | Y | Y | Y | CT | CT | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | CT | W | W |
3 | Lou et al., 2014 | Y | Y | CT | CT | Y | Y | CT | CT | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | W | W |
4 | Whitton et al., 2019 | Y | CT | Y | Y | Y | Y | CT | CT | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | M | M |
5 | Pittman et al., 2020 | Y | Y | CT | Y | Y | Y | CT | CT | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | Y | M | M |
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Workman, A.; Kruger, E.; Micheal, S.; Dune, T. LGBTIQ CALD People’s Experiences of Intimate Partner Violence: A Systematic Literature Review. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 15843. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192315843
Workman A, Kruger E, Micheal S, Dune T. LGBTIQ CALD People’s Experiences of Intimate Partner Violence: A Systematic Literature Review. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(23):15843. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192315843
Chicago/Turabian StyleWorkman, Alex, Erin Kruger, Sowbhagya Micheal, and Tinashe Dune. 2022. "LGBTIQ CALD People’s Experiences of Intimate Partner Violence: A Systematic Literature Review" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 23: 15843. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192315843
APA StyleWorkman, A., Kruger, E., Micheal, S., & Dune, T. (2022). LGBTIQ CALD People’s Experiences of Intimate Partner Violence: A Systematic Literature Review. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(23), 15843. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph192315843