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Sexual and reproductive health indicators and intimate partner violence victimization among female family planning clinic patients who have sex with women and men Heather L. McCauley, Jay G. Silverman, Michele R. Decker, Madina Agénor, Sonya Borrero, Daniel J. Tancredi, Sarah Zelazny, and Elizabeth Miller

By: McCauley, Heather L.
Contributor(s): Silverman, Jay G | Decker, Michele R | Agénor, Madina | Borrero, Sonya | Tancredi, Daniel J | Zelazny, Sarah | Miller, Elizabeth.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticleSeries: Journal of Women's Health.Publisher: Mary Ann Liebert Inc., 2015Subject(s): BISEXUAL | DOMESTIC VIOLENCE | INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE | LGBTIQ+ | REPRODUCTIVE HEALTH | SEXUAL HEALTH | HARMFUL SEXUAL BEHAVIOUR | WOMEN | UNITED STATESOnline resources: Read the abstract In: Journal of Women's Health, 2015, Advance online publication (8 pages)Summary: Sexual minority women are more likely than heterosexual women to have ever experienced intimate partner violence (IPV). Although IPV is associated with sexual risk and poor reproductive health outcomes among US women overall, little is known about whether IPV is related to sexual and reproductive health indicators among sexual minority women in particular. (from the abstract). Record #4709
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Journal of Women's Health, 2015, Advance online publication (8 pages)

Sexual minority women are more likely than heterosexual women to have ever experienced
intimate partner violence (IPV). Although IPV is associated with sexual risk and poor reproductive health outcomes among US women overall, little is known about whether IPV is related to sexual and reproductive health indicators among sexual minority women in particular. (from the abstract). Record #4709