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Violence Against Women
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Cognitive and Emotional Processing in Narratives of Women Abused by Intimate Partners

Danielle Holmes

University of Minnesota

Georg W. Alpers

University of Würzburg

Tasneem Ismailji

Stanford University

Catherine Classen

University of Toronto Women's College Hospital

Talor Wales

Warburg Early Childhood Center

Valerie Cheasty

Andrew Miller

Stanford University

Cheryl Koopman

Stanford University

This study examined relationships between cognitive and emotional processing with changes in pain and depression among intimate partner violence survivors. Twenty-five women who wrote about their most traumatic experiences completed measures of pain and depressive symptoms before the first writing session and again 4 months following the last writing session. Reduced pain was significantly associated with less use of positive and negative emotion words. Relationships between cognitive and emotional aspects of writing with changes in depressive symptoms fell short of statistical significance. The results suggest that emotional processing in narrative writing predicts changes in pain in intimate partner violence survivors.

Key Words: depression • expressive writing • intimate partner violence

Violence Against Women, Vol. 13, No. 11, 1192-1205 (2007)
DOI: 10.1177/1077801207307801


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