Kohrt Brandon A, Bourey Christine
Duke University, Durham, NC, 27708.
Emory University, Atlanta, GA, 30322.
Med Anthropol Q. 2016 Dec;30(4):515-535. doi: 10.1111/maq.12336. Epub 2016 Oct 13.
Our objective was to elucidate how culture influences internal (psychological), external (social), institutional (structural), and health care (medical) processes, which, taken together, create differential risk of comorbidity across contexts. To develop a conceptual model, we conducted qualitative research with 13 female child soldiers in Nepal. Participants gave open-ended responses to intimate partner violence (IPV) vignettes (marital rape, emotional abuse, violence during pregnancy). Twelve participants (92%) endorsed personal responses (remaining silent, enduring violence, forgiving the husband). Twelve participants endorsed communication with one's husband. Only four participants (31%) sought family support, and three contacted police. Ultimately, 12 participants left the relationship, but the majority (nine) only left after the final IPV experience, which was preceded by prolonged psychological suffering and pregnancy endangerment. In conclusion, comorbidity risks are increased in cultural context that rely on individual or couples-only behavior, lack external social engagement, have weak law and justice institutions, and have limited health services.
我们的目标是阐明文化如何影响内在(心理)、外在(社会)、制度(结构)和医疗保健(医学)过程,这些过程共同导致不同背景下共病风险的差异。为了建立一个概念模型,我们对尼泊尔的13名女性儿童兵进行了定性研究。参与者对亲密伴侣暴力(IPV)案例(婚内强奸、情感虐待、孕期暴力)给出了开放式回答。12名参与者(92%)认可个人应对方式(保持沉默、忍受暴力、原谅丈夫)。12名参与者认可与丈夫沟通。只有4名参与者(31%)寻求家庭支持,3人联系了警方。最终,12名参与者离开了这段关系,但大多数人(9人)是在最后一次亲密伴侣暴力事件后才离开的,在此之前他们遭受了长期的心理痛苦和危及妊娠。总之,在依赖个人或仅夫妻行为、缺乏外部社会参与、法律和司法机构薄弱以及医疗服务有限的文化背景下,共病风险会增加。