Washington State University Vancouver, WA, USA.
J Interpers Violence. 2022 Mar;37(5-6):NP2565-NP2587. doi: 10.1177/0886260520943721. Epub 2020 Jul 26.
Ethnographic research from the United States on gender-based violence showing that rural isolation exacerbates intimate partner violence (IPV) is at odds with estimates from nationally representative victimization surveys which indicate that the incidence of IPV in settlements conventionally characterized as rural is similar to or less than the incidence for urban settlements. One possible reason for this discrepancy-that the conventional metropolitan statistical area-based measure of settlement type fails to distinguish isolated rural areas from other nonmetropolitan places-is put to test in this study. Pooled data from 578,471 women interviewed a total of 1,672,999 times in the National Crime Victimization Survey (NCVS) between 1994 and 2015 were used in this study to consider the risk of IPV across a measure of settlement type that differentiates nonmetropolitan settlements into dispersed rural areas or residentially concentrated small towns. Logistic regression estimates of semiannual IPV prevalence were modeled using generalized estimating equations and robust standard errors to compensate for repeated measures and for the complex sample design of the NCVS. After adjusting for age, race/ethnicity, year, and time in sample, these analyses indicated that women from dispersed rural settlements had a lower semiannual risk of IPV (2.31 per 1,000 [95% confidence interval [CI] = [2.02, 2.64]]) than women from small towns (3.30 per 1,000 women [95% CI = [2.82, 3.87]]) or women from the urban core (2.60 per 1,000 [95% CI = [2.44, 2.77]]). Contrary to the ethnographic record, the results of this study indicate that women living in rural isolation are at a lower risk of IPV victimization relative to other American women and that women from small towns-the urbanized portions of nonmetropolitan counties-have been most at risk of suffering physical violence committed by an intimate partner.
美国有关性别暴力的民族志研究表明,农村地区的孤立状态加剧了亲密伴侣暴力(IPV),这与全国代表性受害调查的估计结果相矛盾,后者表明,传统上被认为是农村的定居点的 IPV 发生率与城市定居点相似或低于城市定居点。在这项研究中,人们提出了一个可能的原因,即基于传统大都市统计区的定居类型衡量标准未能将孤立的农村地区与其他非大都市地区区分开来。本研究使用了 1994 年至 2015 年期间全国犯罪受害调查(NCVS)中总共对 578,471 名妇女进行的 1,672,999 次访谈的汇总数据,考虑了通过区分非大都市定居点为分散的农村地区或居住集中的小镇的定居类型衡量标准,IPV 风险。使用广义估计方程和稳健标准误差对半年期 IPV 流行率的逻辑回归估计进行建模,以补偿重复测量和 NCVS 的复杂样本设计。在调整年龄、种族/民族、年份和样本时间后,这些分析表明,与来自小镇的女性(每 1000 名女性中有 3.30 人[95%置信区间[CI]=[2.82,3.87])或城市核心区的女性(每 1000 名女性中有 2.60 人[95%CI=[2.44,2.77]])相比,来自分散的农村定居点的女性发生半年期 IPV 的风险较低(每 1000 人中有 2.31 人[95%CI=[2.02,2.64])。与民族志记录相反,这项研究的结果表明,与其他美国女性相比,生活在农村孤立状态下的女性遭受 IPV 侵害的风险较低,而来自小镇的女性(非大都市县的城市化部分)遭受亲密伴侣实施的身体暴力的风险最高。