Hillis Susan, Mercy James, Amobi Adaugo, Kress Howard
National Center for Injury Prevention and Control, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia; and
Division of Violence Prevention;
Pediatrics. 2016 Mar;137(3):e20154079. doi: 10.1542/peds.2015-4079. Epub 2016 Jan 25.
Evidence confirms associations between childhood violence and major causes of mortality in adulthood. A synthesis of data on past-year prevalence of violence against children will help advance the United Nations' call to end all violence against children.
Investigators systematically reviewed population-based surveys on the prevalence of past-year violence against children and synthesized the best available evidence to generate minimum regional and global estimates.
We searched Medline, PubMed, Global Health, NBASE, CINAHL, and the World Wide Web for reports of representative surveys estimating prevalences of violence against children.
Two investigators independently assessed surveys against inclusion criteria and rated those included on indicators of quality.
Investigators extracted data on past-year prevalences of violent victimization by country, age group, and type (physical, sexual, emotional, or multiple types). We used a triangulation approach which synthesized data to generate minimum regional prevalences, derived from population-weighted averages of the country-specific prevalences.
Thirty-eight reports provided quality data for 96 countries on past-year prevalences of violence against children. Base case estimates showed a minimum of 50% or more of children in Asia, Africa, and Northern America experienced past-year violence, and that globally over half of all children-1 billion children, ages 2-17 years-experienced such violence.
Due to variations in timing and types of violence reported, triangulation could only be used to generate minimum prevalence estimates.
Expanded population-based surveillance of violence against children is essential to target prevention and drive the urgent investment in action endorsed in the United Nations 2030 Sustainable Development Agenda.
有证据证实童年期暴力与成年期主要死因之间存在关联。综合过去一年针对儿童暴力行为的发生率数据,将有助于推动联合国消除一切针对儿童暴力行为的呼吁。
研究人员系统回顾了基于人群的过去一年针对儿童暴力行为发生率的调查,并综合现有最佳证据,得出最低区域和全球估计数。
我们检索了医学数据库、美国国立医学图书馆数据库、全球健康数据库、全球卫生观测站数据库、护理学与健康领域数据库以及万维网,以查找估计针对儿童暴力行为发生率的代表性调查的报告。
两名研究人员独立根据纳入标准评估调查,并对纳入的调查在质量指标上进行评分。
研究人员提取了按国家、年龄组和类型(身体暴力、性暴力、情感暴力或多种类型)划分的过去一年暴力受害发生率数据。我们采用了一种三角测量法,综合数据得出最低区域发生率,该发生率来自各国特定发生率的人口加权平均值。
38份报告提供了96个国家过去一年针对儿童暴力行为发生率的高质量数据。基本情况估计显示,亚洲、非洲和北美洲至少50%或更多的儿童在过去一年遭受过暴力,全球超过一半的儿童(10亿名2至17岁的儿童)遭受过此类暴力。
由于报告的暴力行为发生时间和类型存在差异,三角测量法只能用于得出最低发生率估计数。
扩大基于人群的针对儿童暴力行为的监测对于确定预防目标以及推动对《联合国2030年可持续发展议程》认可的行动进行紧急投资至关重要。