Hatcher Abigail M, Page Sabrina, Aletta van Eck Lele, Pearson Isabelle, Fielding-Miller Rebecca, Mazars Celine, Stöckl Heidi
Galling's School of Global Public Health, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, United States of America.
School of Public Health, Faculty of Health Sciences, University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa.
PLOS Glob Public Health. 2022 Sep 14;2(9):e0000479. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgph.0000479. eCollection 2022.
Violence against women and girls (VAWG) is a global human rights and public health concern. Food insecurity is a sign of severe poverty, and likely to heighten women's vulnerability to VAWG and men's perpetration of it. However, the extent of the association and the multiple pathways between food insecurity and VAWG are not well understood. We systematically assessed peer reviewed quantitative and qualitative literature to explore this in low- and middle-income countries. Fixed effects meta-analysis was used to synthesize quantitative evidence. Qualitative data was analyzed using thematic analysis. From a search of 732 titles, we identified 23 quantitative and 19 qualitative or mixed-methods peer-reviewed manuscripts. In a meta-analysis of 21 cross-sectional studies with 20,378 participants, food insecurity was associated with doubled odds of reported VAWG (odds ratio [OR] = 2.38, 95% confidence interval [CI] = 1.82-3.10). This finding was consistent for both women's experience or male perpetration of VAWG. Qualitative and mixed-methods papers offered insight that underlying conditions of inequitable gender norms, economic deprivation, and social isolation frame both food insecurity and VAWG. Food insecurity may trigger survival behaviors due to household stress and lack of meeting expected gender roles, which leads to VAWG. VAWG exposure may lead to food insecurity if women are more impoverished after leaving a violent household. Potential protective factors include financial stability, the involvement of men in VAWG programming, transformation of gender norms, and supporting women to develop new networks and social ties. Strong evidence exists for a relationship between food security and VAWG. Future funding should target causal directions and preventive options through longitudinal and interventional research. Strategies to ensure households have access to sufficient food and safe relationships are urgently needed to prevent VAWG.
暴力侵害妇女和女童行为是一个全球性的人权和公共卫生问题。粮食不安全是严重贫困的一个表现,并且可能会增加妇女遭受暴力侵害妇女和女童行为的易感性以及男子实施此类行为的可能性。然而,粮食不安全与暴力侵害妇女和女童行为之间关联的程度以及多种途径尚未得到充分了解。我们系统地评估了同行评审的定量和定性文献,以在低收入和中等收入国家探究这一问题。采用固定效应荟萃分析来综合定量证据。使用主题分析对定性数据进行分析。在对732个标题进行检索后,我们确定了23篇定量以及19篇定性或混合方法的同行评审手稿。在对21项涉及20378名参与者的横断面研究进行的荟萃分析中,粮食不安全与报告的暴力侵害妇女和女童行为几率翻倍相关(优势比[OR]=2.38,95%置信区间[CI]=1.82 - 3.10)。这一发现对于妇女遭受暴力侵害妇女和女童行为的经历以及男子实施此类行为均一致。定性和混合方法的论文提供了深刻见解,即不公平的性别规范、经济匮乏和社会孤立等潜在状况构成了粮食不安全和暴力侵害妇女和女童行为的基础。由于家庭压力和未能履行预期的性别角色,粮食不安全可能引发生存行为,进而导致暴力侵害妇女和女童行为。如果妇女在离开暴力家庭后更加贫困,那么遭受暴力侵害妇女和女童行为可能会导致粮食不安全。潜在的保护因素包括金融稳定、男子参与预防暴力侵害妇女和女童行为的项目、性别规范的转变以及支持妇女建立新的网络和社会关系。有强有力的证据表明粮食安全与暴力侵害妇女和女童行为之间存在关联。未来的资金应通过纵向和干预性研究针对因果方向和预防方案。迫切需要采取战略来确保家庭能够获得充足食物并建立安全的关系,以预防暴力侵害妇女和女童行为。