Emory University, Atlanta, GA, USA.
J Interpers Violence. 2013 Mar;28(5):1020-39. doi: 10.1177/0886260512459379. Epub 2012 Sep 24.
This study examines the relationship between male to female physical domestic violence and contraceptive adoption among women in four economically and culturally distinct areas of India. Data from India's 1998-1999 National Family Health Survey-2 and a follow-up survey in 2002-2003 for which the same women in four states were reinterviewed are analyzed. The focus of the analysis is on how baseline exposure to physical domestic violence is associated with the intersurvey adoption of contraception. Women who experience physical violence from their husbands are significantly less likely to adopt contraception in the intersurvey period, although this relationship varies by State. This study builds upon previous work by using an indicator of physical domestic violence exposure that is measured before contraceptive adoption, thus allowing the identification of how exposure to violence shapes the adoption of contraception. The results demonstrate that for women living in Bihar and Jharkhand there is a clear negative relationship between physical domestic violence and a woman's adoption of contraception; this relationship was not found for women in Maharashtra and Tamil Nadu. The results point to the need to include domestic violence screening and referral services into family planning services.
本研究考察了印度四个在经济和文化上具有显著差异的地区中,男性对女性的身体家庭暴力与女性采用避孕措施之间的关系。本研究分析了来自印度 1998-1999 年全国家庭健康调查-2 以及 2002-2003 年对其中四个州的相同妇女进行的后续调查的数据。分析的重点是基线期暴露于身体家庭暴力与调查期间采用避孕措施之间的关联。遭受丈夫身体暴力的妇女在调查期间采用避孕措施的可能性明显较低,尽管这种关系因州而异。本研究通过使用在采用避孕措施之前测量的身体家庭暴力暴露指标,在前人的基础上进行了扩展,从而能够确定暴力暴露如何影响避孕措施的采用。结果表明,对于居住在比哈尔邦和恰尔康德邦的妇女,身体家庭暴力与妇女采用避孕措施之间存在明显的负相关关系;而在马哈拉施特拉邦和泰米尔纳德邦的妇女中则没有发现这种关系。研究结果表明,需要将家庭暴力筛查和转介服务纳入计划生育服务中。