Jethá Eunice Abdul Remane, Lynch Catherine A, Houry Debra E, Rodrigues Maria Alexendra, Chilundo Baltazar, Sasser Scott M, Wright David W
Faculty of Medicine, University Eduardo Mondlane, Maputo, Mozambique.
J Emerg Trauma Shock. 2011 Jul;4(3):369-73. doi: 10.4103/0974-2700.83866.
Family violence (FV) is a common, yet often invisible, cause of violence. To date, most literature on risk factors for family, interpersonal and sexual violence is from high-income countries and might not apply to Mozambique.
To determine the individual risk factors for FV in a cohort of patients seeking care for injuries at three health centers in Maputo, Mozambique.
A prospective multi-center study of patients presenting to the emergency department for injuries from violence inflicted by a direct family member in Maputo, Mozambique, was carried out.
Patients who agreed to participate and signed the informed consent were verbally administered a pilot-tested blank-item questionnaire to ascertain demographic information, perpetrator of the violence, historical information regarding prior abuse, and information on who accompanied the victim and where they received their initial evaluation. De-identified data were entered into SPSS 13.0 (SPSS, version 13.0) and analyzed for frequencies.
During the 8-week study period, 1206 assault victims presented for care, of whom 216 disclosed the relationship of the assailant, including 92 being victims of FV (42.6%). The majority of FV victims were women (63.0%) of age group 15-34 years (76.1%) and were less educated (84%) compared to national averages. Of the patients who reported assault on a single occasion, most were single (58.8%), while patients with multiple assaults were mostly married (63.2%). Most commonly, the spouse was the aggressor (50%) and a relative accompanied the victim seeking care (54.3%). Women most commonly sought police intervention prior to care (63.2%) in comparison to men (35.3%).
In Mozambique, FV affects all ages, sexes and cultures, but victims seeking care for FV were more commonly women who were less educated and poorer.
家庭暴力是暴力行为的一个常见但往往不为人所见的原因。迄今为止,大多数关于家庭、人际和性暴力风险因素的文献来自高收入国家,可能不适用于莫桑比克。
确定在莫桑比克马普托的三个医疗中心寻求受伤治疗的一组患者中家庭暴力的个体风险因素。
在莫桑比克马普托,对因直系家庭成员暴力造成伤害而到急诊科就诊的患者进行了一项前瞻性多中心研究。
同意参与并签署知情同意书的患者接受了经过预试验的无固定答案问卷的口头询问,以确定人口统计学信息、暴力实施者、既往虐待的历史信息,以及关于谁陪伴受害者以及他们在哪里接受初次评估的信息。经过去识别化处理的数据被录入SPSS 13.0(SPSS,版本13.0)并进行频率分析。
在为期8周的研究期间,1206名袭击受害者前来就诊,其中216人透露了袭击者的关系,包括92名家庭暴力受害者(42.6%)。大多数家庭暴力受害者为女性(63.0%),年龄在15 - 34岁之间(76.1%),与全国平均水平相比,受教育程度较低(84%)。在报告单次袭击的患者中,大多数为单身(58.8%),而多次遭受袭击的患者大多已婚(63.2%)。最常见的情况是,配偶是攻击者(50%),亲属陪伴受害者寻求治疗(54.3%)。与男性(35.3%)相比,女性在就医前最常寻求警方干预(63.2%)。
在莫桑比克,家庭暴力影响所有年龄、性别和文化,但因家庭暴力寻求治疗的受害者更常见的是受教育程度较低且较贫困的女性。