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Help-seeking and service utilization among survivors of intimate partner violence in Michigan during the COVID-19 pandemic

Shyrokonis Y, Peitzmeier S, Ward M, Fedina L, Tolman R, Herrenkohl TI
Violence Against Women

This study explores formal and informal intimate partner violence (IPV) service use among women and transgender/nonbinary individuals in the state of Michigan during the COVID-19 pandemic. A total of 14.8% (Nā€‰=ā€‰173) of participants experienced IPV during this period, and 70% utilized at least one formal IPV service (13.3%). Up to 22% of survivors reported wanting to seek formal help but not doing so due to fear of partner reprisal, contracting COVID-19, or COVID-related service reductions. White, pregnant, and part-time-employed survivors were most likely to seek informal help. Older, higher-income, white, part-time-employed, pregnant, and non-essential worker survivors were most likely to seek formal help.

Shyrokonis Y, Peitzmeier S, Ward M, Fedina L, Tolman R, Herrenkohl TI. Help-seeking and service utilization among survivors of intimate partner violence in Michigan during the covid-19 pandemic. Violence Against Women. 2025;31(3-4):695-719. DOI:10.1177/10778012231222491. PMID: 38317289

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Peer Reviewed Research
Outcomes
Process
Social Needs/ SDH
Utilization
Social Determinant of Health
Violence/Safety
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Other Study Design