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  5. Dating Violence Victimization and Alcohol Problems: An Examination of Social Support’s Stress-Buffering Hypothesis
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Dating Violence Victimization and Alcohol Problems: An Examination of Social Support’s Stress-Buffering Hypothesis

Date Issued
May 1, 2010
Author(s)
Shorey, Ryan Christopher  
Advisor(s)
Gregory L. Stuart
Additional Advisor(s)
Todd M. Moore, Kristina C. Gordon
Abstract

Recent evidence suggests that victims of dating violence consume alcohol at greater rates than their non-victimized peers, placing them at risk for the negative consequences produced by alcohol use. Thus, research is needed that examines factors that protect victims from consuming alcohol. Toward this end, the present study sought to examine if perceived and enacted support served as stress-buffering variables of the relationship between dating violence victimization and alcohol problems among a sample of currently dating college students. Partial support was found for the stress-buffering effect of perceived support, but findings did not support enacted support as a traditional stress-buffering variable. Implications of these findings for dating violence prevention programming are discussed.

Subjects

Domestic violence

aggression

alcohol

social support

Disciplines
Clinical Psychology
Degree
Master of Arts
Major
Psychology
Embargo Date
December 1, 2011
File(s)
Thumbnail Image
Name

Shorey_Formatted_Thesis.doc

Size

824 KB

Format

Microsoft Word

Checksum (MD5)

5bac2f5aa22ec6e090625cbedd2b2bde

Thumbnail Image
Name

auto_convert.pdf

Size

131.74 KB

Format

Adobe PDF

Checksum (MD5)

1acc8edb614fe989f9631f0d288e4581

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