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Volume 7, Issue 5 (Suppl)

J Community Med Health Educ

ISSN: 2161-0711 JCMHE, an open access journal

Public Health Congress 2017

November 13-14, 2017

November 13-14, 2017 Osaka, Japan

3

rd

World Congress on

Public Health, Nutrition & Epidemiology

University students’ awareness of intimate partner violence and attitudes toward love

Mika Hasegawa

University of Fukui, Japan

T

o clarify the relationship between the awareness of psychological violence committed by those in relationships with

university students and students’ attitudes toward love. A self-administered questionnaire survey was distrusted among

232 students at University Z in Japan. The survey contents included their awareness regarding psychological violence from

romantic partners (10 items) and their attitudes toward love (24 items). Toward love scale is composed of six subscales: Eros

(passionate and aesthetic love), agape (altruistic love), mania (manic and obsessive love), storge (fraternal love), ludus (fun and

playful love) and pragma (practical love). The relationship between awareness of psychological violence and attitudes toward

love was examined using Fisher’s exact test. Of the 232 students, valid responses were obtained from 151 students, 90.1%

were women and 9.9% were men, with a mean age of 20.3 years (SD 1.2). Regarding the relationship between the awareness

of violence committed by romantic partners and attitudes toward love, those students in the Agape group were found to have

significantly higher rates of ‘not violent’ responses than those in other attitude groups for two items: ‘He/she shouts loudly and

swears at me’ (p=0.026); ‘He/she threatens me by thrusting a knife or other objects toward me’ (p=0.008). The Mania group was

also found to have a significantly higher rate of a ‘not violent’ response for ‘He/she threatens me by thrusting a knife or other

objects toward me’ (p=0.024) in comparison with other attitudes groups. The study findings clarified the relationships between

attitudes toward love and awareness toward violence. It would be useful to carry out education programs firstly by providing

students with opportunities to increase awareness of their own attitudes toward love and based on this understanding of their

own attitudes, help them to increase awareness toward potential violence committed by romantic partners.

Biography

Mika Hasegawa is a Professor of Community Health Nursing at University of Fukui, Faculty of Medicine, School of Nursing. Her current focus is domestic violence and

organizing participatory community health programs. Her recent research was on the effectiveness of domestic violence prevention education for university students. She

is the Director of Victim’s Support Group in Fukui Prefecture. She is also involved in several community partnerships supporting domestic violence victims.

mikah@u-fukui.ac.jp

Mika Hasegawa, J Community Med Health Educ 2017, 7:5 (Suppl)

DOI: 10.4172/2161-0711-C1-031