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With all the blanket news coverage of the disappearance (and eventual discovery) of 22-year-old blogger Gabby Petito — and shamefully, all the other BIPOC women who aren\u2019t<\/em> written about — it brings to light the impact of domestic violence. According to Teton County (Wyoming) Coroner Dr. Brent Blue, who ruled her death a homicide by strangulation, “Unfortunately, this is only one of many deaths around the country of people who are involved with\u00a0domestic violence, and it’s unfortunate that these other deaths did not get as much coverage as this one.\u201d<\/p>\n Petito’s case has sparked a national conversation around whose disappearances gain public, media and law enforcement attention. Indigenous, Black and brown people go missing at higher rates<\/a> but tend to attract less media coverage than white people, particularly white women\u00a0\u2013 a studied phenomenon known as “missing white woman syndrome.”<\/p>\n It’s not only white women who go missing.<\/p>\n According to the National Coalition Against Domestic Violence (NCADV), domestic violence is prevalent in every <\/em>community, and affects all <\/em>people regardless of age, socio-economic status, sexual orientation, gender, race, religion, or nationality.<\/p>\n The statistics are shocking. On average, in the United States an intimate partner physically abuses nearly 20 people per minute. This equates to more than 10 million women and men per year. One (1) in 15 children are exposed to intimate partner violence each year, and 90% of these children are eyewitnesses to this violence.<\/p>\n What can we do about it?<\/p>\n