What Social Impact Does Exposure to Domestic Violence Have on Adolescent Males? A Systemic Review of Literature

Journal article


Icheku, V and Graham, R (2017). What Social Impact Does Exposure to Domestic Violence Have on Adolescent Males? A Systemic Review of Literature. Journal of Healthcare Communications. 2 (1). https://doi.org/10.4172/2472-1654.100045
AuthorsIcheku, V and Graham, R
Abstract

Domestic violence is widespread in the United Kingdom (UK) and accounts for 14 per cent of all violent crimes. It is a significant health concern, as it damages physical and emotional health and can have long lasting negative impact across a wide range of health, social and economic outcomes for families as well as having a major impact on the social development of young people. A recent report shows that in 2002 there were 750,000 children in Britain estimated to have witnessed domestic violence. However, studies demonstrated that children’s exposure to domestic violence between parents tend to seal its “inexpugnably prints” on “their impressionable minds”, they are thought to express more anger, antisocial behaviour, as well as fear, anxiety and depression have greater risk of behavioural, emotional, and psychological problems. It shows that exposure to domestic violence in adolescence is thought to be having more of an impact than exposure in younger children, with earlier exposure having little or no impact without adolescent exposure. This systemic review focuses on the exposure of male adolescents to domestic violence and the impact of domestic violence on them. The review highlights that there were a number of disparate ways in which domestic violence impacted on adolescent males. This ranged from animal cruelty, drug taking, violence and aggression, through to feelings of depression, suicidal ideations, and feelings of sadness and ambivalence. However, the results suggest that while the exposure to domestic violence does indeed have an impact on adolescent males, there appears to be no agreement on any single way in which this impact may be experienced. However, we recommend that combating the scourge of domestic violence requires skilled practitioners to intervene at any given stage. As such, practice educators must ensure that staff under their remit are adequately equipped with the necessary knowledge and skills of detection, to impact on the root causes of domestic violence. This must include increasing awareness among staff of the knowledge of the latest legislation and policies. In addition, training should emphasize the need to maintain liaison with external agencies in developing pathways into services, and timely responses by stakeholder and associate institutions to adequately address this issue that is impacting negatively on male adolescents

Year2017
JournalJournal of Healthcare Communications
Journal citation2 (1)
PublisheriMedPub
ISSN2472 1654
Digital Object Identifier (DOI)https://doi.org/10.4172/2472-1654.100045
Publication dates
Print20 Jan 2017
Publication process dates
Deposited13 Mar 2017
Accepted17 Jan 2017
Publisher's version
License
File Access Level
Open
Permalink -

https://openresearch.lsbu.ac.uk/item/870w0

Download files


Publisher's version
IMEDPUB.pdf
License: CC BY 4.0
File access level: Open

  • 1091
    total views
  • 1179
    total downloads
  • 3
    views this month
  • 2
    downloads this month

Export as

Related outputs

Integrated Care by the Health and Social Services Staff in Joint Emergency Team (JET) to Prevent Unnecessary Hospital Admissions in London Borough of Greenwich
Icheku, V. and Ibe, J. (2019). Integrated Care by the Health and Social Services Staff in Joint Emergency Team (JET) to Prevent Unnecessary Hospital Admissions in London Borough of Greenwich. British Journal of Research. 6 (3), p. 48.
A descriptive cross-sectional study on various uses and outcomes of Garcinia Kola among people of Oshimili North in the Delta State of Nigeria
Icheku, V, Onianwah, IF and Nwulia, A (2019). A descriptive cross-sectional study on various uses and outcomes of Garcinia Kola among people of Oshimili North in the Delta State of Nigeria. AYU. 39 (3), pp. 132-138. https://doi.org/10.4103/ayu.AYU_195_16
Evidence based interventions to improve fostering relationships
Icheku, V and Paris, C (2018). Evidence based interventions to improve fostering relationships. Lambert Academic Publishing.
Comparative cross-sectional quantitative study of health status among consumers of bitter kola in Igbuzor community living in Oshilmili North Local Government area of Delta state.
Icheku, V, Onianwah, IF and Nwulia, A (2018). Comparative cross-sectional quantitative study of health status among consumers of bitter kola in Igbuzor community living in Oshilmili North Local Government area of Delta state. Universal Journal of Food and Nutrition Science. 6 (1), pp. 28-40. https://doi.org/10.13189/fst.2018.060104
Service Users’ Involvement in Interprofessional Learning and Higher Overall Pass Rate.
Icheku, V (2018). Service Users’ Involvement in Interprofessional Learning and Higher Overall Pass Rate. 2nd Global Nursing and Healthcare Conference. London UK 13 - 15 Aug 2018
Integration of Evidence from a Systematic Review into Practice involving the care of adolescent males exposed to domestic violence
Icheku, V and Graham, R (2018). Integration of Evidence from a Systematic Review into Practice involving the care of adolescent males exposed to domestic violence. London SG Williams Publishing UK Co Limited.
Impact of hiv related stigma and discrimination on working women in sub-sahara africa
Icheku, V (2015). Impact of hiv related stigma and discrimination on working women in sub-sahara africa. in: Connerley, M and Wu, J (ed.) Handbook on Well-Being of Working Women Springer. pp. 781-803
Is Zika virus the definitive culprit in cases of Microcephaly?
Icheku, V (2017). Is Zika virus the definitive culprit in cases of Microcephaly? Germany Lambert Academic Publishing.
What interventions work to improve relationships between birth parents and children in foster care?
Icheku, V and Paris, C (2017). What interventions work to improve relationships between birth parents and children in foster care? International Journal of Current Research. 9.
A new report that may provide clue as to why for 70 years there was no documented cases of birth defect in Africa where Zika virus originated
Icheku, V (2017). A new report that may provide clue as to why for 70 years there was no documented cases of birth defect in Africa where Zika virus originated. 3rd International Conference on Influenza and Zoonotic Diseases. Birmingham, UK 21 - 22 Aug 2017 London South Bank University.
Zika Virus and Microcephaly
Icheku, V (2017). Zika Virus and Microcephaly. Smart Technology to Fight Zika virus Epidemic. Recife, Brazil 10 - 13 Sep 2017
Exploration of Zika virus travel-related transmission and a review of travel advice to minimise health risk to UK travellers
Icheku, V and Icheku, C (2016). Exploration of Zika virus travel-related transmission and a review of travel advice to minimise health risk to UK travellers. Universal Journal of Public health. 4 (4), pp. 203-211. https://doi.org/10.13189/ujph.2016.040406
A review of the evidence linking Zika virus to the developmental abnormalities that lead to microcephaly in view of recent cases of birth defects in Africa
Icheku, V (2016). A review of the evidence linking Zika virus to the developmental abnormalities that lead to microcephaly in view of recent cases of birth defects in Africa. Journal of MPE Molecular Pathological Epidemiology. 1 (1), pp. 1-4.