Domestic violence survivors' housing stability, safety, and well-being over time: Examining the role of domestic violence housing first, social support, and material hardship.

Rachael Goodman-Williams, Cortney Simmons, Danielle Chiaramonte, Oyesola Oluwafunmilayo Ayeni, Mayra Guerrero, Mackenzie Sprecher, Cris M Sullivan
Author Information
  1. Rachael Goodman-Williams: Department of Psychology, Wichita State University. ORCID
  2. Cortney Simmons: Department of Psychology, Yale University. ORCID
  3. Danielle Chiaramonte: Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, School of Public Health, Yale University. ORCID
  4. Oyesola Oluwafunmilayo Ayeni: Department of Psychology, Michigan State University. ORCID
  5. Mayra Guerrero: Department of Psychology, University of Illinois at Chicago. ORCID
  6. Mackenzie Sprecher: School of Social Work, Wayne State University. ORCID
  7. Cris M Sullivan: Department of Psychology, Michigan State University. ORCID

Abstract

Intimate partner violence remains a significant public health issue and survivors often need various forms of support to achieve safety. The increased likelihood of experiencing housing instability and homelessness among survivors has led to an uptake in domestic violence agencies implementing housing-based interventions, such as Domestic Violence Housing First (DVHF), to address survivors' needs. The present study expands on prior research supporting the effectiveness of DVHF to examine situational factors that moderate the outcomes associated with this model among 406 survivors seeking services from domestic violence agencies located in the Pacific Northwestern region of the United States. Using latent profile analysis, participants were grouped into three latent classes: (a) "high abuse/instability," (b) "still affected," and (c) "doing better." Latent transition analysis was used to estimate the probability that participants would transition into a different latent class over time with social support (SS), material hardship, and receipt of DVHF services included as model predictors. Receipt of DVHF predicted improvements in survivors' safety, housing stability, mental health, and well-being, such that receiving DVHF was associated with higher odds of survivors transitioning into the "doing better" class. Social support and material hardship also emerged as significant factors predicting class membership, such that higher levels of social support and financial stability predicted membership in the "doing better" class. Additionally, social support and financial stability appeared to augment receipt of DVHF services, with DVHF being more strongly associated with positive outcomes among participants who also had high levels of social support and lower levels of material hardship. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2023 APA, all rights reserved).

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Grants

  1. T32 DA019426/NIDA NIH HHS
  2. /Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation

MeSH Term

Domestic Violence
Survivors
Humans
Male
Female
Mental Health
Housing
Public Assistance
Social Support
Financial Stress
Intimate Partner Violence
Anxiety
Depression
Adult
Middle Aged

Word Cloud

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