Further psychometric examination of the Intimate Partner Violence Internalized Stigma Scale (IPVIS; Brunton & Harris, 2023): Examining criterion-related validity

Acta Psychol (Amst). 2024 Nov 12:251:104576. doi: 10.1016/j.actpsy.2024.104576. Online ahead of print.

Abstract

Intimate partner violence (IPV) is any physical, sexual, or psychological abuse or violence, including stalking and coercive behavior such as degradation, intimidation, and control. IPV self-stigma is the awareness of and agreeance with negative IPV stereotypes/attitudes that are internalized by individuals victimized by IPV. IPV stereotypes contribute to self-stigma (e.g., internalization of beliefs and stereotypes, and anticipation of adverse reactions based on the stigma associated with IPV), which may be a barrier to help-seeking. However, the lack of psychometrically sound measurement of IPV self-stigma limits this area of research. The Intimate Partner Violence Internalized Stigma Scale (IPVIS; Brunton & Harris, 2023) was developed to fill this gap, and this study provides further psychometric examination of the scale by examining criterion-related validity and confirming the scale's factor structure. Participants, (n = 320, Mage = 38.46, SD = 13.65) predominantly Caucasian/white/European, identifying as female and heterosexual, well-educated and not under major or severe financial stress, completed the IPVIS and measures of IPV, fear of negative evaluation, emotional support, social isolation, anxiety, depression, IPV attitudes, devaluation/discrimination, and secrecy. Exploratory factor analysis confirmed the previously established unidimensionality of the IPVIS and criterion-related validity was demonstrated by correlations with similar variables (depression and anxiety, rs = 0.36, devalued or discriminated against, r = 0.44 and secrecy as a coping orientation, r = 0.36). The IPVIS also predicted isolation (β = 0.24, p < .001) and secrecy (β = 0.34, p < .001). The scale showed strong internal consistency, ω = 0.96. Findings were replicated with a smaller subsample of 160 individuals (aged 18-75, M = 37.93, SD = 13.02, predominantly female, with a Caucasian/white/European cultural identity, heterosexual sexual orientation, well-educated and not under major or severe financial stress) who indicated emotional or physical partner abuse. The limitations of this study include the cross-sectional design, a lack of invariance tests and under-representation of certain minority groups. The key strength of the IPVIS is its demonstrated reliability, validity and as previously established, its potential suitability to examine IPV self-stigma for diverse individuals and relationship types.

Keywords: Domestic violence; IPV; Intimate partner violence; Self-stigma; Stereotypes; Stigma.