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Violence against women epidemic

Last Updated 05 July 2013, 16:24 IST

Three in 10 women worldwide have been punched, shoved, dragged, threatened with weapons, raped or subjected to other violence from a current or former partner. Close to 1 in 10 have been sexually assaulted by someone other than a partner. Of women who are murdered, more than 1 in 3 were killed by an intimate partner.

These grim statistics come from the first global, systematic estimates of violence against women. Linked papers published on June 20 in The Lancet and Science assess, respectively, how often people are killed by their partners and how many women experience violence from them. And an associated report and guidelines from the World Health Organisation in Geneva, along with the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine and the South African Medical Research Council in Pretoria, estimates how often women suffer sexual violence from someone other than a partner, gauge the impact of partner and nonpartner violence on women’s health, and advise health care providers on how to support the victims.

“These numbers should be a wake-up call. We want to highlight that this is a problem that occurs in all regions and it’s unacceptably high,” says Claudia Garcia-Moreno, a physician at WHO who coordinates research on gender violence and worked on all the publications.

According to the WHO report, 42 per cent of women who experienced violence were physically injured by their partners. But violence harms women in ways beyond injury. Violent partners may prevent women from visiting health clinics or from accessing medicine or contraception. Women who experienced violence from a partner are more likely to be infected with HIV or other sexually transmitted diseases, to have an abortion, to give birth to underweight and premature babies, and to attempt suicide. They are also more likely to use alcohol and are twice as likely to experience depression - factors that can be both a cause of and be caused by a partner’s violence.

Such figures mean that violence should be considered alongside “mainstream” health risks such as smoking and alcohol use, says Kristin Dunkle, a social epidemiologist at Emory University in Atlanta who was not involved in the studies. “This is the moment where we say 'no one is allowed to have their head in the sand, and no one is addressing women’s health if they aren’t addressing violence.'”

The data came from a concerted effort over many years to develop and disseminate methods to measure gender-related violence, says Rachel Jewkes, head of the South African Medical Research Council. “By saying ‘we’re going to measure it,’ we’ve put it on the scientific agenda.”

As recently as 15 or 20 years ago,  Jewkes says, governments generally considered domestic violence as something that was private and inevitable - and something they could do little to address. Having global figures, she says, puts violence on the radar of “global bodies that are looking for one number to show that violence is an issue.”

To compile their estimates, each report combed through the peer-reviewed literature as well as the so-called “gray literature,” such as statistics and reports compiled by government agencies. To estimate the prevalence of violence against women across global regions and age ranges, for example, dozens of researchers searched more than 25,000 abstracts, says Karen Devries, a social epidemiologist at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, who worked on the reports.

Devries’ team sought studies that assessed the prevalence of violence across entire countries or large regions within them. They also performed or requested additional analyses of four large international surveys. In total, their estimates were based on data from 141 studies in 81 countries, with 80 per cent of the estimates based on what are considered gold-standard methods - private one-on-one interviews in which women are asked about specific acts of violence, including slaps, kicks, use of weapons and rape over their lifetime.

The highest rates of partner violence, estimated between 54 per cent and 78 per cent, were found in central sub-Saharan Africa, but even high-income regions in Asia, North America and Western Europe had rates above 15 per ecnt. These jump considerably when sexual nonpartner violence is factored in.

And by establishing baseline figures for violence, governments and social researchers are better placed to develop and assess interventions, says Jewkes. “I want to see us in a situation where we are tracking the global decline of women being hit by partners and experiencing rape.”

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(Published 05 July 2013, 16:24 IST)

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