1. Intimate Partner Violence During COVID-19 Restrictions: A Study of 30 Countries From the I-SHARE Consortium.
- Author
-
Campbell, Linda, Tan, Rayner K. J., Uhlich, Maximiliane, Francis, Joel M., Mark, Kristen, Miall, Naomi, Eleuteri, Stefano, Gabster, Amanda, Shamu, Simukai, Plášilová, Leona, Kemigisha, Elizabeth, Olumide, Adesola, Kosana, Priya, Hurtado-Murillo, Felipe, Larsson, Elin C., Cleeve, Amanda, Calvo González, Soraya, Perrotta, Gabriela, Fernández Albamonte, Victoria, and Blanco, Lucía
- Subjects
HEALTH services accessibility ,SOCIAL support ,CONFIDENCE intervals ,GOVERNMENT regulation ,CROSS-sectional method ,POPULATION geography ,WORLD health ,INTIMATE partner violence ,RISK assessment ,SOCIAL sciences ,DESCRIPTIVE statistics ,SEX crimes ,STAY-at-home orders ,ODDS ratio ,COVID-19 pandemic - Abstract
Intimate partner violence (IPV) causes substantial physical and psychological trauma. Restrictions introduced in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, including lockdowns and movement restrictions, may exacerbate IPV risk and reduce access to IPV support services. This cross-sectional study examines IPV during COVID-19 restrictions in 30 countries from the International Sexual HeAlth and REproductive Health (I-SHARE) study conducted from July 20th, 2020, to February, 15th, 2021. IPV was a primary outcome measure adapted from a World Health Organization multicountry survey. Mixed-effects modeling was used to determine IPV correlates among participants stratified by cohabitation status. The sample included 23,067 participants from 30 countries. A total of 1,070/15,336 (7.0%) participants stated that they experienced IPV during COVID-19 restrictions. A total of 1,486/15,336 (9.2%) participants stated that they had experienced either physical or sexual partner violence before the restrictions, which then decreased to 1,070 (7.0%) after the restrictions. In general, identifying as a sexual minority and experiencing greater economic vulnerability were associated with higher odds of experiencing IPV during COVID-19 restrictions, which were accentuated among participants who were living with their partners. Greater stringency of COVID-19 restrictions and living in urban or semi-urban areas were associated with lower odds of experiencing IPV in some settings. The I-SHARE data suggest a substantial burden of IPV during COVID-19 restrictions. However, the restrictions were correlated with reduced IPV in some settings. There is a need for investing in specific support systems for survivors of IPV during the implementation of restrictions designed to contain infectious disease outbreaks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF