Head injuries in intimate partner violence: cognitive, motor, and psychiatric symptoms.

Hughes, N. C., Osama, T. A., Rigney, G. H., Jo, J., Williams, K., Zuckerman, S. L., & Terry, D. P. (2026). Head injuries in intimate partner violence: cognitive, motor, and psychiatric symptoms.. Brain Injury, 1-11.

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Intimate partner violence (IPV) has been associated with various adverse health outcomes, and these outcomes may be worse in those experiencing IPV-related head injuries. Cognitive, motor, and psychiatric symptoms associated with these exposures are incompletely understood.

METHODS: In this cross-sectional survey study, participants completed questionnaires assessing demographics, IPV-related exposure, depression, anxiety, cognitive, and neurobehavioral symptoms. Participants were stratified into groups 1) without IPV history ('controls,' n = 1032), 2) with IPV history without IPV-related head injury ('IPV-only,' n = 163), and 3) with IPV-related head injury ('IPV-HI,' n = 102). ANCOVAs and logistic regressions controlling for age, sex, and race were used for comparison with subsequent pairwise comparisons using Tukey's post-hoc and estimated marginal means.

RESULTS: IPV groups had greater rates of all psychiatric conditions reported, general health problems including sleep difficulties and chronic pain, and motor symptoms (all p < 0.05). Compared to IPV-only, the IPV-HI group reported greater rates of migraines, chronic pain, and suicidal ideation, as well as greater anxiety, cognitive difficulties, and neurobehavioral symptoms (all p < 0.05).

CONCLUSION: IPV groups reported more health issues than controls, and those with IPV-HI had the greatest rates of general health, cognitive, psychiatric, and neurobehavioral difficulties. These findings provide novel insight into IPV and IPV-related head injury outcomes.

Last updated on 04/02/2026
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