In the News
Intimate Violence Remains a Big Killer of Women
By Marie Tessier
WeNews.com
July 25, 2008
Over a thousand U.S. women are killed each year by a current or
former intimate partner. Two million a year are injured. A sexual
assault occurs every two minutes. Fifth in "The Memo"
series on the status of U.S. women.
GRAY, Maine (WOMENSENEWS)--With groceries in her car, Jennifer
Lessard apparently planned to make several quick stops after work
before picking up her two school-age sons one afternoon in May.
Instead, she became the 13th victim of domestic homicide in Maine
this year, part of a murder trend that's on pace to exceed every
other year since the state began compiling records in 1971.
In an all-too-common scenario in the United States--where a woman's
risk of being murdered by an intimate partner is highest after leaving
an abusive relationship--the 40-year-old pharmacist attempted to
pick up her belongings at the home of a former boyfriend, whom she
had recently left.
Lessard was found dead there, with a gunshot wound to the head.
Her boyfriend was also dead, from a self-inflicted gunshot wound,
and left a suicide note, according to state police.
Domestic violence is a leading cause of death for women ages 15-44,
according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention in Atlanta.
It is a leading cause of death of pregnant women, mortality research
shows. And African American and Native American women are at the
highest risk of intimate partner homicide.
Sexual violence is so prevalent that it touches every family in
the United States, advocates say.
Estimates show that 272,000 sexual assaults against people age
12 and older occurred in 2006.
Crime Drop Benefits Men Most
Since violent crime rates peaked in the early 1990s men have benefited
most from a downward trend that has left Americans safer overall.
In the three decades from 1976 to 2005, the number of men killed
by female partners has dropped precipitously, from about 1,300 to
329. But homicides of women by male partners has declined far less,
dropping from around 1,500 to about 1,200, figures from the U.S.
Justice Department's Bureau of Justice Statistics show.
Those female homicide figures reached their lowest point of 1,155
in 2004, but climbed slightly to 1,181 in 2005, the latest year
available from the Bureau of Justice Statistics.
The bloody trail of those deaths, along with injuries, crisscrosses
the nation each year and overshadows women's daily lives.
Nearly one-third of all U.S. women report experiencing violence
from a current or former spouse or boyfriend at some point in their
lives, according to the San Francisco-based Family Violence Prevention
Fund.
The impact of violence spreads through families, health care services
and the workplace, and is associated with far higher disease risk.
Women who have experienced domestic violence are 80 percent more
likely to have a stroke, 70 percent more likely to have heart disease,
60 percent more likely to have asthma and 70 percent more likely
to drink heavily than women who have not experienced intimate partner
violence, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
Declaring an Emergency
At least one governor is putting the problem on the front burner.
In early June Massachusetts Gov. Deval Patrick declared a "domestic
violence emergency" in his state, where deaths at the hands
of a domestic partner nearly tripled to 42 in 2007 from 15 in 2005.
So far in 2008, domestic crime has killed 19 people in Massachusetts,
according to Boston-based Jane Doe Inc., the Massachusetts Coalition
Against Sexual and Domestic Violence.
Patrick signed legislation creating statewide guidelines for hospitals
treating victims of violence and called for strengthened training
of police officers in the state.
Maine is also taking steps, says Lois Galgay Reckitt, a longtime
advocate for battered women in the state who serves on the board
of the Denver-based National Coalition Against Domestic Violence.
All police officers will be required to complete domestic violence
training next year to be certified, she says, and the plan expands
training requirements that are now common in most states.
But while access to crisis services and an informed police response
are improving for battered women in Maine and elsewhere, Reckitt
says more action is needed.
"We need to start focusing on prosecution of domestic violence
offenses as a matter of homicide prevention," says Reckitt,
who serves on the board of the Maine Criminal Justice Academy in
Vassalboro. "Incarceration might have an impact, but we are
having trouble in Maine getting the prosecution to happen."
Not Enough Programs to Help Women
Esta Soler, president of the Family Violence Prevention Fund,
which carries out public health campaigns for the federal Centers
for Disease Control, agrees with Reckitt and says health care providers
can also do more. "Too few women are screened for violence
and offered the help and referrals they need."
Despite the ongoing high level of violence, the 2006 National Crime
Victimization Survey found declines in sexual and domestic violence
since passage of the Violence Against Women Act in 1994, which distributed
over $570 million in funding to anti-violence programs across the
country this year.
"There's still a sexual assault every two minutes in the United
States, but the Violence Against Women Act has helped focus police,
prosecutors and judges on the seriousness of the crime," says
Scott Berkowitz, president of the Rape, Abuse and Incest National
Network, an anti-sexual violence advocacy group in Washington, D.C.
"The progress shows that we need to fully fund the programs,
because the ones that have been funded are working."
But other leaders in the field challenge the 2006 data and any
interpretation of it that suggests sexual violence is ebbing.
"I don't think we can say that violence is declining when
the number of people seeking services continues to grow or stay
the same," says Rita Smith, executive director of the National
Coalition Against Domestic Violence in Denver. "It could be
that the numbers aren't being counted right, or it could be that
women have stopped using the justice system, but the experience
in the field is not that women are safer."
Sue Else, executive director of the National Network to End Domestic
Violence, says the 2006 national survey misses thousands of instances
of violence because it is not safe for battered women to respond
truthfully to questions about the violence that can permeate--or
threaten--their lives.
"The National Crime Victimization Survey is not an accurate
reflection of what we know about domestic violence prevalence,"
says Else, which tracked requests for services for one day in 2007,
and found that service providers were stretched beyond capacity.
"More than 7,700 requests for services went unmet in a 24-hour
period in 2007 because there simply weren't enough resources to
help them."
Women in college are particularly vulnerable to gender violence.
Over the course of a college career between 20 and 25 percent of
female students will be sexually assaulted, according to a 2000
report from the Bureau of Justice Statistics.
Soler and other advocates share a time-worn perspective on violence
against women: Preventing violence means transforming a culture
and its institutions.
"Changing attitudes is our greatest long-term challenge,"
Soler says. "But we are making progress and we can do even
more."
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