Centre for Public Health, Liverpool John Moores University, Liverpool, UK.
Lancet. 2012 Sep 8;380(9845):899-907. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(12)60692-8. Epub 2012 Jul 12.
Globally, at least 93 million children have moderate or severe disability. Children with disabilities are thought to have a substantially greater risk of being victims of violence than are their non-disabled peers. Establishment of reliable estimates of the scale of the problem is an essential first step in the development of effective prevention programmes. We therefore undertook a systematic review and meta-analysis to synthesise evidence for the prevalence and risk of violence against children with disabilities.
For this systematic review and meta-analysis, we searched 12 electronic databases to identify cross-sectional, case-control, or cohort studies reported between Jan 1, 1990, and Aug 17, 2010, with estimates of prevalence of violence against children (aged ≤18 years) with disabilities or their risk of being victims of violence compared with children without disabilities.
17 studies were selected from 10,663 references. Reports of 16 studies provided data suitable for meta-analysis of prevalence and 11 for risk. Pooled prevalence estimates were 26·7% (95% CI 13·8-42·1) for combined violence measures, 20·4% (13·4-28·5) for physical violence, and 13·7% (9·2-18·9) for sexual violence. Odds ratios for pooled risk estimates were 3·68 (2·56-5·29) for combined violence measures, 3·56 (2·80-4·52) for physical violence, and 2·88 (2·24-3·69) for sexual violence. Huge heterogeneity was identified across most estimates (I(2)>75%). Variations were not consistently explained with meta-regression analysis of the characteristics of the studies.
The results of this systematic review confirm that children with disabilities are more likely to be victims of violence than are their peers who are not disabled. However, the continued scarcity of robust evidence, due to a lack of well designed research studies, poor standards of measurement of disability and violence, and insufficient assessment of whether violence precedes the development of disability, leaves gaps in knowledge that need to be addressed.
WHO Department of Violence and Injury Prevention and Disability.
在全球范围内,至少有 9300 万儿童存在中度或重度残疾。残疾儿童被认为遭受暴力侵害的风险大大高于其非残疾同龄人。建立可靠的问题规模估计是制定有效预防方案的第一步。因此,我们进行了系统审查和荟萃分析,以综合残疾儿童遭受暴力侵害的流行率和风险的证据。
在这项系统综述和荟萃分析中,我们搜索了 12 个电子数据库,以确定 1990 年 1 月 1 日至 2010 年 8 月 17 日之间报告的横断面、病例对照或队列研究,这些研究估计了残疾儿童(年龄≤18 岁)遭受暴力的流行率或他们与非残疾儿童相比遭受暴力的风险。
从 10663 篇参考文献中筛选出 17 项研究。16 项研究的报告提供了适合荟萃分析流行率和 11 项研究适合风险分析的数据。综合暴力措施的合并患病率估计值为 26.7%(95%CI 13.8-42.1),身体暴力为 20.4%(13.4-28.5),性暴力为 13.7%(9.2-18.9)。综合暴力措施的合并风险估计比值比为 3.68(2.56-5.29),身体暴力为 3.56(2.80-4.52),性暴力为 2.88(2.24-3.69)。大多数估计值存在很大的异质性(I(2)>75%)。元回归分析研究特征无法一致解释变异。
这项系统综述的结果证实,残疾儿童比其非残疾同龄人更有可能成为暴力的受害者。然而,由于缺乏精心设计的研究、残疾和暴力的衡量标准较差、以及暴力是否先于残疾发展的评估不足,导致仍存在大量知识空白,需要加以解决。
世卫组织暴力和伤害预防与残疾部门。