TY - JOUR
T1 - The Chicago Health and Life Experiences of Women Couples Study
T2 - Protocol for a Study of Stress, Hazardous Drinking, and Intimate Partner Aggression among Sexual Minority Women and Their Partners
AU - Veldhuis1, Cindy B.
AU - Porsch, Lauren M.
AU - Bochicchio, Lauren A.
AU - Campbell, Jacquelyn
AU - Johnson, Timothy P.
AU - LeBlanc, Allen J.
AU - Leonard, Kenneth E.
AU - Wall, Melanie
AU - Wilsnack, Sharon C.
AU - Xu, Mariah
AU - Hughes, Tonda L.
N1 - Funding Information:
This study was funded by the National Institutes of Health (NIH)/National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism (NIAAA; R01AA027252; TLH, principal investigator). CBV’s work on this manuscript was supported by an NIAAA/NIH Ruth Kirschstein Postdoctoral Individual National Research Service Award (F32AA025816; CBV, principal investigator) and an NIH/NIAAA Pathway to Independence Award (K99AA028049; CBV, principal investigator). The authors would like to express their appreciation to Ms Kelly Martin for her comments on earlier drafts and to the Chicago Health and Life Experiences of Women study participants and their partners.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 JMIR Publications Inc. All Rights Reserved.
PY - 2021/10
Y1 - 2021/10
N2 - Background: Large gaps exist in research on alcohol use and intimate partner aggression (IPA) among sexual minority women (SMW; eg, lesbian, bisexual). Dyadic research with SMW and their partners can illuminate how couple-level factors operate in conjunction with individual-level factors to shape well-being in this understudied and vulnerable population. Given the traditionally gendered lens with which women are primarily viewed as victims and men as perpetrators, understanding the dynamics of IPA in same-sex female couples can also advance research and practice related to IPA more generally. Objective: Guided by a recent extension of the minority stress model that includes relational (couple-level) sexual minority stress and the I-cubed theoretical perspective on IPA, we will collect individual and dyadic data to better characterize the links between hazardous drinking and IPA among SMW and their partners. First, this study aims to examine the associations among minority stress, hazardous drinking, and IPA in SMW and their partners. Minority stressors will be assessed as both individual and couple-level constructs, thus further extending the minority stress model. Second, we aim to examine potential mediators and moderators of the associations among minority stress, hazardous drinking, and IPA. Finally, we aim to test models guided by the I-cubed theoretical perspective that includes instigating (eg, relationship conflict), impelling (eg, negative affect and trait anger), and inhibiting (eg, relationship commitment and emotion regulation) or disinhibiting (eg, hazardous drinking) influences on IPA perpetration. Methods: This United States National Institutes of Health funded project will draw from a large and diverse cohort of SMW currently enrolled in the Chicago Health and Life Experiences of Women (CHLEW) study a 21-year longitudinal study of risk factors and consequences associated with SMW hazardous drinking. SMW currently enrolled in the CHLEW and their partners will be invited to participate in the CHLEW Couples Study. By analyzing dyadic data using actor-partner interdependence models, we will examine how each partner s minority stress, hazardous drinking, and IPA experiences are associated with both her own and her partner s minority stress, hazardous drinking, and IPA perpetration. Results: Data collection began in February 2021 and will likely continue through 2023. Initial results should be available by mid-2024. Conclusions: The CHLEW Couples Study will fill important gaps in knowledge and provide the basis for future research aimed at clarifying the causal pathways linking hazardous drinking and IPA among SMW. This will support the development of culturally appropriate targeted individual and dyadic prevention and intervention strategies.
AB - Background: Large gaps exist in research on alcohol use and intimate partner aggression (IPA) among sexual minority women (SMW; eg, lesbian, bisexual). Dyadic research with SMW and their partners can illuminate how couple-level factors operate in conjunction with individual-level factors to shape well-being in this understudied and vulnerable population. Given the traditionally gendered lens with which women are primarily viewed as victims and men as perpetrators, understanding the dynamics of IPA in same-sex female couples can also advance research and practice related to IPA more generally. Objective: Guided by a recent extension of the minority stress model that includes relational (couple-level) sexual minority stress and the I-cubed theoretical perspective on IPA, we will collect individual and dyadic data to better characterize the links between hazardous drinking and IPA among SMW and their partners. First, this study aims to examine the associations among minority stress, hazardous drinking, and IPA in SMW and their partners. Minority stressors will be assessed as both individual and couple-level constructs, thus further extending the minority stress model. Second, we aim to examine potential mediators and moderators of the associations among minority stress, hazardous drinking, and IPA. Finally, we aim to test models guided by the I-cubed theoretical perspective that includes instigating (eg, relationship conflict), impelling (eg, negative affect and trait anger), and inhibiting (eg, relationship commitment and emotion regulation) or disinhibiting (eg, hazardous drinking) influences on IPA perpetration. Methods: This United States National Institutes of Health funded project will draw from a large and diverse cohort of SMW currently enrolled in the Chicago Health and Life Experiences of Women (CHLEW) study a 21-year longitudinal study of risk factors and consequences associated with SMW hazardous drinking. SMW currently enrolled in the CHLEW and their partners will be invited to participate in the CHLEW Couples Study. By analyzing dyadic data using actor-partner interdependence models, we will examine how each partner s minority stress, hazardous drinking, and IPA experiences are associated with both her own and her partner s minority stress, hazardous drinking, and IPA perpetration. Results: Data collection began in February 2021 and will likely continue through 2023. Initial results should be available by mid-2024. Conclusions: The CHLEW Couples Study will fill important gaps in knowledge and provide the basis for future research aimed at clarifying the causal pathways linking hazardous drinking and IPA among SMW. This will support the development of culturally appropriate targeted individual and dyadic prevention and intervention strategies.
KW - bisexual women
KW - intimate partner aggression
KW - lesbian
KW - partner violence
KW - same-sex couples
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UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/citedby.url?scp=85117893732&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.2196/28080
DO - 10.2196/28080
M3 - Article
C2 - 34665154
AN - SCOPUS:85117893732
SN - 1929-0748
VL - 10
JO - JMIR Research Protocols
JF - JMIR Research Protocols
IS - 10
M1 - A9
ER -