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Methods for the 2019 New Zealand family violence study- a study on the association between violence exposure, health and well-being Janet Fanslow, Pauline Gulliver, Ladan Hashemi, Zarintaj Malihi and Tracey McIntosh

By: Fanslow, Janet L.
Contributor(s): Gulliver, Pauline | Hashemi, Ladan | Malihi, Zarintaj | McIntosh, Tracey.
Material type: materialTypeLabelArticleSeries: Kōtuitui: New Zealand Journal of Social Sciences Online.Publisher: Taylor & Francis, 2021Subject(s): CHILD ABUSE | DOMESTIC VIOLENCE | ELDER ABUSE | FAMILY VIOLENCE | INTIMATE PARTNER VIOLENCE | PREVALENCE | RESEARCH METHODS | SURVEYS | 2019 NZ Family Violence Study | He Koiora Matapopore | NEW ZEALANDOnline resources: DOI: 10.1080/1177083X.2020.1862252 (Open access) In: Kōtuitui: New Zealand Journal of Social Sciences Online, 2021, Online publication, 11 January 2021Summary: Family violence, which includes child abuse, intimate partner violence and elder abuse, is a problem of national and global significance. Robust evidence about the scale and consequences of the problem is needed to inform policy and practice, including information on high-risk groups, and risk and protective factors. In this article, the methods utilised for collecting data for NZ’s 2019 Family Violence Survey are described, along with a summary of the characteristics of the population-based sample obtained. The 2019 NZ Family Violence Survey will provide prevalence estimates of violence exposure for women and men across a wide range of types of violence across the lifespan. This article provides a basis for understanding who was included in the study sample, and for enabling understanding and interpretation of future study findings. (Authors' abstract). Record #6953
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Kōtuitui: New Zealand Journal of Social Sciences Online, 2021, Online publication, 11 January 2021

Family violence, which includes child abuse, intimate partner violence and elder abuse, is a problem of national and global significance. Robust evidence about the scale and consequences of the problem is needed to inform policy and practice, including information on high-risk groups, and risk and protective factors. In this article, the methods utilised for collecting data for NZ’s 2019 Family Violence Survey are described, along with a summary of the characteristics of the population-based sample obtained. The 2019 NZ Family Violence Survey will provide prevalence estimates of violence exposure for women and men across a wide range of types of violence across the lifespan. This article provides a basis for understanding who was included in the study sample, and for enabling understanding and interpretation of future study findings. (Authors' abstract). Record #6953