Solanke Bola Lukman
Department of Demography and Social Statistics, Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife, Nigeria.
BMC Int Health Hum Rights. 2018 Jan 11;18(1):1. doi: 10.1186/s12914-018-0143-9.
Exposure to interparental violence (EIPV) has been identified as a risk factor for intimate partner violence (IPV). However, studies in Nigeria have rarely and specifically examined exposure to interparental violence as a predictor of IPV. The objective of the study was to examine the relationship between exposure to interparental violence and women's experience of intimate partner violence.
The 2013 Nigeria Demographic and Health Survey (NDHS) women recode dataset was analysed. The weighted sample size was 19,925 women aged 15-49 years. The outcome variable was women's experience of at least one type of IPV measured by combining partner physical, sexual and emotional violence experienced by the surveyed women. The main explanatory variable was exposure to interparental violence measured by response to question on whether a woman witnessed her father ever beat her mother. Individual/relationship and community characteristics were selected for statistical control in the study. The multilevel mixed-effect regression was applied in three models using Stata version 12. Model 1 was based solely on interparental violence, while individual/relationship factors were included in Model 2. In Model 3, all research variables were included.
The study revealed that less than one-tenth of the women witnessed interparental violence, and women exposed to interparental violence compared with non exposed women had higher prevalence of all forms of IPV. In Model 1, women exposed to interparental violence were more than five times as likely as non exposed women to experience IPV (OR = 5.356; CI: 3.371-8.509). In Model 2, women exposed to interparental violence were nearly five times as likely as non exposed women to experience IPV (OR = 4.489; CI: 3.047-6.607). In Model 3, women exposed to interparental violence were four times as likely as non exposed women to experience IPV (OR = 4.018; CI: 2.626-6.147).
The study provided additional evidence that exposure to interparental violence increase women's risk of IPV in Nigeria. Reducing future prevalence of intimate partner violence may require social and behaviour change communication (SBCC) that not only change perception of children who witnessed interparental violence, but also help them to overcome intergenerational effects of interparental aggression.
接触父母间暴力(EIPV)已被确定为亲密伴侣暴力(IPV)的一个风险因素。然而,尼日利亚的研究很少专门考察将接触父母间暴力作为亲密伴侣暴力的一个预测因素。本研究的目的是考察接触父母间暴力与女性亲密伴侣暴力经历之间的关系。
对2013年尼日利亚人口与健康调查(NDHS)女性重新编码数据集进行分析。加权样本量为19925名15至49岁的女性。结果变量是女性至少经历一种亲密伴侣暴力的情况,通过综合被调查女性所经历的伴侣身体暴力、性暴力和情感暴力来衡量。主要解释变量是接触父母间暴力,通过对女性是否目睹过父亲殴打母亲这一问题的回答来衡量。在研究中选择了个体/关系和社区特征进行统计控制。使用Stata 12版本在三个模型中应用多水平混合效应回归。模型1仅基于父母间暴力,而模型2纳入了个体/关系因素。在模型3中,纳入了所有研究变量。
研究表明,不到十分之一的女性目睹过父母间暴力,与未接触父母间暴力的女性相比,接触父母间暴力的女性各种形式的亲密伴侣暴力患病率更高。在模型1中,接触父母间暴力的女性经历亲密伴侣暴力的可能性是非接触女性的五倍多(比值比[OR]=5.356;置信区间[CI]:3.371 - 8.509)。在模型2中,接触父母间暴力的女性经历亲密伴侣暴力的可能性是非接触女性的近五倍(OR = 4.489;CI:3.047 - 6.607)。在模型3中,接触父母间暴力的女性经历亲密伴侣暴力的可能性是非接触女性的四倍(OR = 4.018;CI:2.626 - 6.147)。
该研究提供了更多证据表明,在尼日利亚,接触父母间暴力会增加女性遭受亲密伴侣暴力的风险。降低未来亲密伴侣暴力的患病率可能需要社会和行为改变沟通(SBCC),这不仅要改变目睹父母间暴力的儿童的观念,还要帮助他们克服父母间攻击行为的代际影响。