Intimate Partner Violence and Pregnancy
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Fact Sheet, 2024
Intimate partner violence (IPV) involves behaviours by an intimate partner or ex-partner that cause physical, sexual, or psychological harm. While IPV can occur between partners of any gender or sexual orientation, women are most often the victims, and men are frequently the perpetrators. This fact sheet highlights the prevalence, risk factors, and impacts of IPV specifically during pregnancy. It details the significant health risks associated with IPV for both the mother and fetus and outlines key strategies for detection, intervention, and support.
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Intimate partner violence (domestic violence, partner abuse) refers to abuse that occurs within an intimate relationship. Intimate partner violence can happen in any intimate relationship regardless of income, length, living arrangements, marital status, or social status. This fact sheet discusses the impact of witnessing intimate partner violence on young children.
SKU: 8-302Trauma, Stress, and Young Children
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Many people believe that young children are not affected by stress and trauma. Unfortunately, this is not the case. Brain development, attachment, and emotional regulation can all be impacted by stress and trauma. This fact sheet outlines the differences between positive and negative stress as well as tolerable and toxic trauma. Professionals are given practical tips for working with children who have been traumatized.
SKU: 8-502Helping Young Children Cope with Stress: Developing Resiliency
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This fact sheet helps professionals and communities understand their roles in helping young children to develop resiliency. Resilience is the ability to cope with and recover from stressful situations, changes, or problems.
SKU: 8-602Resiliency and Young Children: Reaching Out
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There are three main abilities that people who are resilient have: relax, reflect, and respond. These can be further broken down into seven resiliency skills. Each skill forms the basis on which others can be built. These include emotional regulation, impulse control, causal analysis, empathy, realistic optimism, self-efficacy, and reaching out. This fact sheet focuses on practical ways that caregivers and frontline workers can help children build skills in the area of reaching out.
SKU: 8-609