1. Household sanitation access and risk for non-marital sexual violence among a nationally representative sample of women in India, 2015-16.
- Author
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Kayser, Georgia Lyn, Chokhandre, Praveen, Rao, Namratha, Singh, Abhishek, McDougal, Lotus, and Raj, Anita
- Subjects
Gender-based violence ,India ,Open defecation ,Sexual violence ,Shared sanitation ,Prevention ,Violence Research ,Violence Against Women ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Gender Equality ,Clean Water and Sanitation ,No Poverty ,Public Health and Health Services - Abstract
BackgroundLack of household sanitation, specifically toilet facilities, can adversely affect the safety of women and girls by requiring them to leave their households to defecate alone and at night, leaving them more vulnerable to non-marital sexual violence. This study analyzes the association between household sanitation access and past year victimization from non-marital sexual violence (NMSV) in India.MethodsWe analyzed 74,698 women age 15-49 from whom information on NMSV was collected in India's National Family Health Survey 2015-16 (NFHS-4). We used multivariable logistic regression to test the relationship between women's household sanitation access and recent NMSV experience, controlling for socioeconomics (SES;e.g., age, marital status, caste, wealth, employment), for the total sample and stratified by rural/urban, given lower access to sanitation and lower NMSV in rural contexts.ResultsWe found that 46.2% of households in our sample lacked their own private sanitation facilities (58.0% rural; 24.5% urban) and were forced to openly defecate (37.3%) or walk to a shared sanitation facility (8.9%), and 0.45% of women report NMSV in the last 12 months (0.33% rural; 0.68% urban). Our multivariable model indicated no significant association between having private household sanitation facilities and NMSV for the total sample, but stratified analyses indicate a significant association for rural but not urban women. In rural India, those who lack private household sanitation, compared to those with a household toilet, have significantly greater odds of NMSV (AOR = 2.45; p
- Published
- 2021