Abstract:
Objectives: The study had two objectives: to examine the rates of exposure to family violence
among students in a non-Western society, with Sri Lanka as a case study and to
examine the psychological effects of their exposure.
Method: Four hundred seventy six medical students in Sri Lanka were surveyed. A selfadministered
questionnaire was utilized, which included two forms of the Conflict Tactics
Scales (CTS) to measure the extent to which the students witnessed interparental violence
and experienced parental violence in childhood and adolescence. Additional instruments
included the Trauma Symptom Checklist (TSC-33), which measures dissociation, anxiety,
depression, and sleep disturbance, and the Family Functioning in Adolescence Questionnaire
(FFAQ), which measures the students’ perceptions of the functioning and environment
in their families.
Results: Between 16% and 18% of the participants indicated that they had witnessed at least
one act of interparental psychological aggression, and between 2% and 16% indicated that
they had witnessed at least one act of interparental physical violence before the age of 18.
Between 11% and 84% of the participants had experienced at least one act of parental psychological
aggression, and between 2% and 22% had experienced at least one act of parental
physical violence during childhood. Significant amounts of the variance in participants’
dissociation, anxiety, depression, and sleep disturbancewere explained by their witnessing
interparental violence and experiencing parental violence.
Conclusions: The present study provides strong evidence that the rates of family violence
in a non-Western society (i.e., Sri Lankan families) are within the range of violence found
in Western societies. In addition, the psychological effects of exposure to family violence
in non-Western societies are similar to those in Western societies, although the relevance
of familial, cultural, and political contexts as well as socio-demographic characteristics to
those effects in non-Western societies should be taken into consideration.
Practice implications: Counseling centers at universities should focus on developing better
routine screening to reach students who are victims of family violence. The importance of
sensitivity to risks associated with asking students about these problems should be taken
into consideration. Interventions should aim to increase the students’ safety, to alleviate
the mental health consequences of their exposure to family violence, and to help those
victims to develop productive help-seeking behaviors and coping resources to ensure their
safety. Collaboration between the university and community and within the university for
the benefit of those victims may help in facilitating the indentification of and intervention
with students’ victims of family violence.