International Food Policy Research Institute, 1201 I St., NW, Washington, DC, 20005-3915, USA.
UNICEF Office of Research-Innocenti, Piazza SS Annunziata 12, 50122, Florence, Italy.
BMC Public Health. 2020 Jul 2;20(1):1051. doi: 10.1186/s12889-020-09069-7.
Violence against children is a pervasive public health issue, with limited data available across multiple contexts. This study explores the rarely studied prevalence and dynamics around disclosure, reporting and help-seeking behaviours of children who ever experienced physical and/or sexual violence.
Using nationally-representative Violence Against Children Surveys in six countries: Cambodia, Haiti, Kenya, Malawi, Nigeria and Tanzania, we present descriptive statistics for prevalence of four outcomes among children aged 13-17 years: informal disclosure, knowledge of where to seek formal help, formal disclosure/help seeking and receipt of formal help. We ran country-specific multivariate logistic regressions predicting outcomes on factors at the individual, household and community levels.
The prevalence of help-seeking behaviours ranged from 23 to 54% for informal disclosure, 16 to 28% for knowledge of where to seek formal help, under 1 to 25% for formal disclosure or help seeking, and 1 to 11% for receipt of formal help. Factors consistently correlated with promoting help-seeking behaviours included household number of adult females and absence of biological father, while those correlated with reduced help-seeking behaviours included being male and living in a female-headed household. Primary reasons for not seeking help varied by country, including self-blame, apathy and not needing or wanting services.
Across countries examined, help-seeking and receipt of formal services is low for children experiencing physical and/or sexual violence, with few consistent factors identified which facilitated help-seeking. Further understanding of help seeking, alongside improved data quality and availability will aid prevention responses, including the ability to assist child survivors in a timely manner.
儿童遭受暴力是一个普遍存在的公共卫生问题,在多个背景下的数据都十分有限。本研究探讨了在很少被研究的情况下,曾经经历过身体和/或性暴力的儿童在披露、报告和寻求帮助行为方面的流行率和动态。
利用六个国家(柬埔寨、海地、肯尼亚、马拉维、尼日利亚和坦桑尼亚)具有全国代表性的《暴力侵害儿童问题调查》,我们呈现了 13-17 岁儿童中四个结果的流行率描述性统计数据:非正规披露、了解在哪里寻求正式帮助、正式披露/寻求帮助和获得正式帮助。我们针对个体、家庭和社区层面的因素,在国家特定的多变量逻辑回归中预测了结果。
帮助寻求行为的流行率从非正规披露的 23%到 54%、从了解在哪里寻求正式帮助的 16%到 28%、从正式披露或寻求帮助的不足 1%到 25%、从获得正式帮助的 1%到 11%不等。与促进帮助寻求行为一致相关的因素包括家庭中成年女性的数量和没有生父,而与减少帮助寻求行为相关的因素包括男性和生活在女性为户主的家庭中。各国因不寻求帮助的原因各不相同,包括自责、冷漠和不需要或不想要服务。
在所研究的国家中,经历身体和/或性暴力的儿童寻求帮助和获得正式服务的比例都很低,很少有确定的一致因素可以促进帮助寻求。进一步了解寻求帮助的情况,以及改善数据质量和可用性,将有助于预防应对措施,包括及时协助儿童幸存者的能力。