
Alcohol Abuse and Domestic Violence
Many studies show a high rate of alcohol abuse among men
who batter their female partners. Yet is there really a link between
alcohol abuse and domestic violence? No evidence supports a
cause-and-effect relationship between the two problems. The relatively high
incidence of alcohol abuse among men who batter must be viewed as the
overlap of two widespread social problems.
Efforts to link alcohol abuse and domestic violence
reflect society's tendency to view battering as an individual deviant
behavior. Moreover, there is a reluctance to believe that domestic violence
is a pervasive social problem that happens among all kinds of American
families. For these reasons, it is essential to emphasize what is known
about the relationship between alcohol abuse and domestic violence.
- Battering is a socially learned behavior, and is not the result of
substance abuse or mental illness. Men who batter frequently use alcohol
abuse as an excuse for their violence. They attempt to rid themselves of
responsibility for the problem by blaming it on the effects of alcohol.
- Many men who batter do not drink heavily and many alcoholics do not beat
their wives. Some abusers with alcohol problems batter when drunk, and
others when they are sober.
- In one batterers' program, 80% of the men had abused alcohol at the time
of the latest battering incident. The vast majority of men, however, also
reportedly battered their partners when not under the influence of
alcohol.
- Data on the concurrence of domestic violence and alcohol abuse vary
widely, from as low as 25% to as high as 80% of cases.
- Alcoholism and battering do share some similar characteristics,
including:
- both may be passed from generation to generation
- both involve denial or minimization of the problem
- both involve isolation of the family
- A battering incident that is coupled with alcohol abuse may be more
severe and result in greater injury.
- Alcoholism treatment does not "cure" battering behavior; both problems
must be addressed separately. However, provisions for the woman's safety
must take precedence.
- A small percent (7% to 14%) of battered women have alcohol abuse
problems, which is no more than that found in the general female
population. A woman's substance abuse problems do not relate to the
cause of her abuse, although some women may turn to alcohol and other drugs
in response to the abuse. To become independent and live free from
violence, women should receive assistance for substance abuse problems in
addition to other supportive services.
- Men living with women who have alcohol abuse problems often try to
justify their violence as a way to control them when they're drunk. A
woman's failure to remain substance-free is never an excuse for the
abuser's violence.
This information is from the "National Woman Abuse Prevention
Project".
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