Marphatia Akanksha A, Ambale Gabriel S, Reid Alice M
Department of Geography, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom.
Front Public Health. 2017 Oct 18;5:269. doi: 10.3389/fpubh.2017.00269. eCollection 2017.
In many traditional societies, women's age at marriage acts simultaneously as a gateway to new family roles and the likelihood of producing offspring. However, inadequate attention has previously been given to the broader health and social implications of variability in women's marriage age for public health. Biomedical scientists have primarily been concerned with whether the onset of reproduction occurs before the woman is adequately able to nurture her offspring and maintain her own health. Social scientists have argued that early marriage prevents women from attaining their rightful education, accessing employment and training opportunities, developing social relationships with peers, and participating in civic life. The aim of this review article is to provide comprehensive research evidence on why women's marriage age, independent of age at first childbirth, is a crucial issue for public health. It focuses on data from four South Asian countries, Bangladesh, India, Nepal, and Pakistan, in which marriage is near universal and where a large proportion of women still marry below the United Nations prescribed minimum marriage age of 18 years. Using an integrative perspective, we provide a comprehensive synthesis of the physiological, bio-demographic, and socio-environmental drivers of variable marriage age. We describe the adverse health consequences to mothers and to their offspring of an early age at marriage and of childbearing, which include malnutrition and high rates of morbidity and mortality. We also highlight the complex association of marriage age, educational attainment, and low societal status of women, all of which generate major public health impact. Studies consistently find a public health dividend of increased girls' education for maternal and child nutritional status and health outcomes. Paradoxically, recent relative increases in girls' educational attainment across South Asia have had limited success in delaying marriage age. This evidence suggests that in order for public health initiatives to maximize the health of women and their offspring, they must first address the factors that shape the age at which women marry.
在许多传统社会中,女性的结婚年龄同时成为她们承担新家庭角色以及生育后代可能性的一个切入点。然而,此前人们对女性结婚年龄的变化对公共卫生产生的更广泛的健康和社会影响关注不足。生物医学科学家主要关注生育开始时女性是否有足够能力养育子女并维持自身健康。社会科学家则认为早婚阻碍女性接受应有的教育、获得就业和培训机会、与同龄人建立社会关系以及参与公民生活。这篇综述文章的目的是提供全面的研究证据,说明为何女性的结婚年龄(独立于初育年龄)是公共卫生领域的一个关键问题。它聚焦于四个南亚国家——孟加拉国、印度、尼泊尔和巴基斯坦的数据,在这些国家结婚现象几乎普遍存在,而且很大一部分女性仍在联合国规定的最低结婚年龄18岁以下结婚。我们从综合视角出发,全面综合了结婚年龄变化的生理、生物人口学和社会环境驱动因素。我们描述了早婚和早育对母亲及其后代产生的不良健康后果,包括营养不良以及高发病率和高死亡率。我们还强调了结婚年龄、教育程度和女性社会地位低下之间的复杂关联,所有这些都会对公共卫生产生重大影响。研究一直发现女孩教育程度提高对母婴营养状况和健康结果有公共卫生效益。矛盾的是,最近南亚地区女孩教育程度的相对提高在推迟结婚年龄方面成效有限。这一证据表明,为使公共卫生举措能最大限度地保障女性及其后代的健康,必须首先解决影响女性结婚年龄的因素。