Screening for Multiple Types of Family Violence: Development and Validation of the Family Polyvictimization Screen

Objective: Different types of violence tend to co-occur within a family where the members often share common family characteristics, a situation described as family polyvictimization. In response to the lack of a validated screening tool, this study developed and validated the Family Polyvictimizati...

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Main Authors: Ko Ling Chan, Qiqi Chen, Mengtong Chen, Camilla K. M. Lo, Lu Yu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Frontiers Media S.A. 2019-10-01
Series:Frontiers in Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpubh.2019.00282/full
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spelling doaj-7076e90cfc414f179f84a2ae394da1a82020-11-25T02:12:47ZengFrontiers Media S.A.Frontiers in Public Health2296-25652019-10-01710.3389/fpubh.2019.00282484673Screening for Multiple Types of Family Violence: Development and Validation of the Family Polyvictimization ScreenKo Ling ChanQiqi ChenMengtong ChenCamilla K. M. LoLu YuObjective: Different types of violence tend to co-occur within a family where the members often share common family characteristics, a situation described as family polyvictimization. In response to the lack of a validated screening tool, this study developed and validated the Family Polyvictimization Screen (FPS), the first brief screening tool applicable to members of the same family with up to three generations.Methods: The FPS was designed to screen family polyvictimization by assessing and capturing different types of violence, including child abuse and neglect (CAN), intimate partner violence (IPV), and elder abuse. The FPS was compared with the Criterion Standard scales. It is suitable for use as a self-report for individual family members for specific violence or as a proxy report for an adult family member to serve as informant. In this study, a community sample of 445 households was recruited from Hong Kong (n = 250) and Shanghai (n = 195). One adult parent from each three-generation family was selected as the informant to report all family polyvictimization experiences in the preceding year.Results: Moderate to high agreement (79.1–99.8%) was found between the FPS and the standard measurements, such as the revised Conflict Tactics Scales (CTS2) and the Conflict Tactics Scales: Parent-Child Version (CTSPC). Exceptions appeared in regard to physical assault on elders due to the rarity of reported cases. The specificity was high, while the sensitivity estimates appeared low, especially for the more sensitive sexual abuse cases.Conclusion: The validated FPS demonstrated its potential utility as a brief tool for screening family polyvictimization in clinical settings with substantial agreement and satisfactory accuracy in the Chinese population.https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpubh.2019.00282/fullfamily polyvictimizationscreenintimate partner violencechild abuse and neglectelder abusevalidation
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ko Ling Chan
Qiqi Chen
Mengtong Chen
Camilla K. M. Lo
Lu Yu
spellingShingle Ko Ling Chan
Qiqi Chen
Mengtong Chen
Camilla K. M. Lo
Lu Yu
Screening for Multiple Types of Family Violence: Development and Validation of the Family Polyvictimization Screen
Frontiers in Public Health
family polyvictimization
screen
intimate partner violence
child abuse and neglect
elder abuse
validation
author_facet Ko Ling Chan
Qiqi Chen
Mengtong Chen
Camilla K. M. Lo
Lu Yu
author_sort Ko Ling Chan
title Screening for Multiple Types of Family Violence: Development and Validation of the Family Polyvictimization Screen
title_short Screening for Multiple Types of Family Violence: Development and Validation of the Family Polyvictimization Screen
title_full Screening for Multiple Types of Family Violence: Development and Validation of the Family Polyvictimization Screen
title_fullStr Screening for Multiple Types of Family Violence: Development and Validation of the Family Polyvictimization Screen
title_full_unstemmed Screening for Multiple Types of Family Violence: Development and Validation of the Family Polyvictimization Screen
title_sort screening for multiple types of family violence: development and validation of the family polyvictimization screen
publisher Frontiers Media S.A.
series Frontiers in Public Health
issn 2296-2565
publishDate 2019-10-01
description Objective: Different types of violence tend to co-occur within a family where the members often share common family characteristics, a situation described as family polyvictimization. In response to the lack of a validated screening tool, this study developed and validated the Family Polyvictimization Screen (FPS), the first brief screening tool applicable to members of the same family with up to three generations.Methods: The FPS was designed to screen family polyvictimization by assessing and capturing different types of violence, including child abuse and neglect (CAN), intimate partner violence (IPV), and elder abuse. The FPS was compared with the Criterion Standard scales. It is suitable for use as a self-report for individual family members for specific violence or as a proxy report for an adult family member to serve as informant. In this study, a community sample of 445 households was recruited from Hong Kong (n = 250) and Shanghai (n = 195). One adult parent from each three-generation family was selected as the informant to report all family polyvictimization experiences in the preceding year.Results: Moderate to high agreement (79.1–99.8%) was found between the FPS and the standard measurements, such as the revised Conflict Tactics Scales (CTS2) and the Conflict Tactics Scales: Parent-Child Version (CTSPC). Exceptions appeared in regard to physical assault on elders due to the rarity of reported cases. The specificity was high, while the sensitivity estimates appeared low, especially for the more sensitive sexual abuse cases.Conclusion: The validated FPS demonstrated its potential utility as a brief tool for screening family polyvictimization in clinical settings with substantial agreement and satisfactory accuracy in the Chinese population.
topic family polyvictimization
screen
intimate partner violence
child abuse and neglect
elder abuse
validation
url https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpubh.2019.00282/full
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