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Domestic Violence, Alcohol and Substance Abuse of Domestic Violence, Alcohol and Substance Abuse Thesis mentAlcohol and substance abuse are the main causes of domestic violence in homes.Expository Paragraphs Domestic violence is defined as the use of psychosomatic, deliberate physical, sexual, or emotional power by a member of the family or by one sexual partner in order to control another. Such acts include oral, emotional, and bullying; killing or injuring pets; intimidation; forced sex; and punching, slapping, choking, kicking, wounding, burning, murdering, and shooting victims (Ncbi.nlm.nih.gov, n.d.). The main target of this domestic violence includes spouses, children, elderly relatives, parents, stepparents, sibs, and sexual partners.
Substance and alcohol abuse are the main risk factor for domestic violence. Excessive use of alcohol in men increases the possibility of wife abuse (Lynetta, 2011). According to researchers, there is a relation between the 2 behaviors and its exact character remains blurred. One research worker states that, “alcohol and substance abuse are the most prominent element that leads to domestic violence. Many of the theorists found that too much use of alcohol and substance abuse are the main factor in the dynamics of spouse beating (Ncbi.nlm.nih.gov, n.d.). Many statistics records show a relationship between domestic violence, alcohol and substance abuse.
According to recent reports of the Journal of American Medical Association (JAMA) assailants in more than 90% of the domestic abuse cases used alcohol or substance abuse on the day of the assault (Buddy, 2011). In addition to this, one more study shows this relation among domestic violence, alcohol and substance abuse; according to this study before assaulting their partners forty-eight to eighty-seven percent of the batterers were under the influence of alcohol, among these rates substance abuse rate is thirteen to twenty percent whereas alcohol rate is sixty to seventy percent (Buddy, 2011).
ReferencesBuddy, T. (2011). Domestic Abuse and Alcohol. [online] Retrieved from: http://alcoholism.about.com/cs/abuse/a/aa990331.htm.Lynetta. (2011). Domestic Violence: You Are Not Alone. AuthorHouse.Ncbi.nlm.nih.gov (n.d.). Chapter 1—Effects of Domestic Violence on Substance Abuse Treatment - Substance Abuse Treatment and Domestic Violence - NCBI Bookshelf. [online] Retrieved from: http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/books/NBK64441/.
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