Meskele Mengistu, Khuzwayo Nelisiwe, Taylor Myra
School of Nursing and Public Health, Discipline of Public Health, University of KwaZulu-Natal, Durban, South Africa.
School of Public Health, Wolaita Sodo University, P.O.Box: 138, Soda, Ethiopia.
Reprod Health. 2021 Feb 1;18(1):25. doi: 10.1186/s12978-020-01044-0.
Ethiopia is one of the nations which has an enormous burden of intimate partner violence (IPV), and where it is usually difficult to talk about HIV separately from IPV.
This research aimed to explore the lived experience of IPV against women using antiretroviral therapy (ART) and other outpatient services in Wolaita Zone, Ethiopia METHODS: We used an Interpretive (hermeneutic) Phenomenological Analysis design among purposively selected adult women aged 18-49 years. A total of 43 women participated in this study, of whom 30 were using ART, and 13 women were using other health services. We used an in-depth interview and focus group discussions until data saturation, while conscious of the need to maintain the scientific rigor, dependability, and credibility. The data were transcribed verbatim and translated into English. We read the transcripts repeatedly to understand the content. We used NVivo 11 software to assist with data organisation, and also, we used the framework analysis method.
We identified five themes, namely: "women's terrifying experiences of violence," "the effect of violence on women's health," "support/lack of support /partner's controlling behaviours," "women's feelings about the available services," and "IPV prevention strategies from the perspective of women." Interviewees described their violent experiences which included wife-beating, being stigmatised in front of others, having material thrown at the woman's face, wife's hand and teeth were broken, forced sex, restriction of movement, name-calling, threats to hurt, being insulted, being left alone, and the withdrawal of finances. The negative health impacts reported included abortion, infection with HIV and other sexually transmitted diseases, disability, child's death, and depression. The disclosure of HIV test information resulted in violence. Inappropriate punishment of the perpetrator and the lack of a supportive women's network to avert IPV were perceived as legal limitations.
IPV is a considerable health burden, varying in its presentation and its negative impact on women's health. Improved laws should provide justice for all victims. Establishing a women's network to assist women at risk of violence, should be emphasised. Unwise HIV test result disclosure leads to IPV; hence HIV disclosure should be facilitated through health care providers.
埃塞俄比亚是亲密伴侣暴力(IPV)负担极为沉重的国家之一,在该国,通常很难将艾滋病毒问题与亲密伴侣暴力分开来谈。
本研究旨在探索埃塞俄比亚沃莱塔地区接受抗逆转录病毒疗法(ART)及其他门诊服务的女性遭受亲密伴侣暴力的生活经历。方法:我们对18至49岁的成年女性进行了有目的的抽样,并采用解释性(诠释学)现象学分析设计。共有43名女性参与了本研究,其中30名正在接受抗逆转录病毒疗法,13名女性正在使用其他医疗服务。我们进行了深入访谈和焦点小组讨论,直至数据饱和,同时意识到需要保持科学严谨性、可靠性和可信度。数据被逐字转录并翻译成英文。我们反复阅读转录本以理解内容。我们使用NVivo 11软件协助数据整理,同时,我们采用了框架分析方法。
我们确定了五个主题,即:“女性可怕的暴力经历”、“暴力对女性健康的影响”、“支持/缺乏支持/伴侣的控制行为”、“女性对现有服务的感受”以及“女性视角下的亲密伴侣暴力预防策略”。受访者描述了她们的暴力经历,包括殴打妻子、在他人面前被羞辱、被向脸上扔东西、妻子的手和牙齿被打断、强迫性行为、行动受限、辱骂、受到伤害威胁、被侮辱、被独自留下以及资金被撤回。报告的负面健康影响包括流产、感染艾滋病毒和其他性传播疾病、残疾、儿童死亡以及抑郁。艾滋病毒检测信息的披露导致了暴力行为。对施暴者的不当惩罚以及缺乏一个支持性的女性网络来避免亲密伴侣暴力被视为法律限制。
亲密伴侣暴力是一项相当大的健康负担,其表现形式及其对女性健康的负面影响各不相同。完善的法律应为所有受害者伸张正义。应强调建立一个女性网络,以协助面临暴力风险的女性。不明智地披露艾滋病毒检测结果会导致亲密伴侣暴力;因此,应通过医疗服务提供者来促进艾滋病毒检测结果的披露。