JOURNAL ARTICLE
Determining Whether State Policy Is in Line With Substance- and Alcohol-Related Best Practices for Domestic Violence Intervention Programs.
Published In: Partner Abuse, 2025, v. 16, n. 3. P. 352 1 of 3
Database: CINAHL Ultimate 2 of 3
Authored By: Langhinrichsen-Rohling, Jennifer; Sotiroff, Alexa; Berte, Julianne; Hamel, Aviva 3 of 3
Abstract
Enhancing the effectiveness of Domestic Violence Intervention Programs (DVIPs) is necessary and may require up-to-date state-specific or national guidance. Currently, many U.S. states provide recommendations and requirements for DVIP length, content, and treatment curriculum through one or more of three types of documents: state laws, standards, and/or guidelines. However, these documents are updated irregularly and vary substantially in length, content, enforceability, and authorship expertise (i.e., legislators versus domestic violence [DV] experts and/or DV coalition members). Meanwhile, one robust yet controversial finding is that DV perpetrators with co-occurring substance use conditions have increased difficulty engaging with, sustaining attendance at, and benefiting from standard DVIP treatment (Jewell & Wormith, 2010). Yet, the degree to which state-specific DVIP documents address how perpetrator substance use is to be assessed and treated within DVIPs is understudied. To fill this gap, guiding state documents were obtained as available (n = 47 states; 94%); these were coded with excellent interrater reliability (agreement = 91%). Consistent with research advances, state documents generally encouraged DVIPs to assess perpetrator substance use at intake (n = 41). However, fewer documents directed DVIP facilitators to address the link between substance use and DV within their curriculum (n = 25). Some state documents even prohibited substance use-related messages to be incorporated into the DVIP curriculum (n = 19). Unfortunately, even fewer states' documents recommended follow-up of the perpetrator's substance use during DVIP participation or after a substance abuse-related referral (n = 14). Efforts to align DVIP-guiding documents with knowledge related to increasing DVIP treatment effectiveness are necessary as is determining adherence to guiding documents.
Additional Information
- Source:Partner Abuse. 2025/07, Vol. 16, Issue 3, p352
- Document Type:Journal Article
- Subject Area:Health and Medicine
- Publication Date:2025
- ISSN:1946-6560
- DOI:10.1891/PA-2023-0027
- Accession Number:187729176
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