Alcohol Abuse, Women, and Domestic Violence (Part 4)

Journal Title: Women's Health – Open Journal - Year 2017, Vol 3, Issue 3

Abstract

To the shame of our society statistics from as early as 2003 were revealed by the U.S. Bureau of Justice reporting that in 2001, 588,490 non-fatal assaults were perpetrated against women by their current or former husband, or partner1 These women were beaten by the very men they believed in and loved. As early as 1996, a study by the American Psychological Association (APA) announced that one out of every three women in America will experience at least one physical assault by their partner during adulthood, and 92% of American women surveyed in 2003 ranked domestic violence and sexual assault as amongst their major concerns.2 The health-related costs of what has come be called, ‘Intimate Partner Violence’ (IPV) exceeded 5.8 Billion U.S. dollars a year. Of this total, nearly 4.1 billion U.S. dollars represented the costs for direct medical and mental healthcare, with productivity losses estimated to be 1.8 billion US dollars.3 It is estimated that approximately 50% of all incidents of domestic violence are due to alcohol abuse, and in a survey of in excess of 2000 American couples, the rate of IPV was 15 times higher in households where the husbands were often intoxicated, as opposed to those husbands who were never drunk.4 The World Health Organization (WHO) describes the levels of violence experienced by the world’s women as ‘a global public health problem of epidemic proportions, requiring urgent action’. We were in the midst of a crisis of injustice and inequity then, and we still are as far as domestic violence is concerned. As long as we fail to resolve the problem of alcohol abuse, we will have inadvertently preserved the ineluctability of drunken assaults on the women they call their wives or intimate partners, while pretending the spurious posture of a veritable partner of his loving wife. The time has truly come to extirpate the violent assaults of men who make their intimate partners suffer the terror of their alcoholic rage.

Authors and Affiliations

Ronald S. Laura

Keywords

Related Articles

Iron Deficiency in Women

It is a well known fact that anaemia can give rise to a range of problems for people who suffer from it.1 In what follows, I will be concentrating on elaborating some of the subtle health issues surrounding anaemia. Anae...

Breast Cancer Screening and the AsianAmerican and Pacific Islander Communities

Years before the new breast cancer screening was established, whenever you hear about breast cancer, the buzz words was “early detection saves lives.” Translating this hype is easy: when breast cancer was found in its ea...

Efficacy of a Multiple Health Behavior Change Intervention on Women’s Health Outcomes

Objective: Examine the efficacy of a 60 day autophagy-activating multiple health behavior change (MHBC) intervention that targets exercise, diet, sleep, and skincare on women’s health outcomes. Design: Using a single-arm...

Hormone Replacement Therapy and its Risks and Benefits for Women

There is no doubt that as both women and men age, the decline in the hormones which in their earlier years kept them vigorous and youthful has impacted dramatically on their health. Hormonal balance plays an integral rol...

Impact of the Poly Implant Prosthesis Breast Implants Recall in Women With Breast Reconstruction: A South-Eastern French Cross-Sectional Survey Nested in a Prospective Cohort

The Poly Implant Prosthesis (PIP) Breast Implants crisis involved thousands of women in the countries concerned, women with breast cancer in particular. It was proposed here to investigate the impact of the PIP Breast Im...

Download PDF file
  • EP ID EP554944
  • DOI 10.17140/WHOJ-3-e012
  • Views 137
  • Downloads 0

How To Cite

Ronald S. Laura (2017). Alcohol Abuse, Women, and Domestic Violence (Part 4). Women's Health – Open Journal, 3(3), 18-20. https://europub.co.uk./articles/-A-554944