Addis Ababa University School of Public Health, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
Department of Population Family and Reproductive Health, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, MD, USA.
BMC Public Health. 2023 Apr 20;23(1):725. doi: 10.1186/s12889-023-15634-7.
Globally, 2-14% of women experience intimate partner violence (IPV) during pregnancy. Timely response to IPV is critical to mitigate related adverse health outcomes. Barriers to accessing limited IPV support services are pervasive in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs), such as Ethiopia; key barriers include mistrust, stigmatization, and self-blame, and discourage women from disclosing their experiences. Infection control measures for COVID-19 have the potential to further disrupt access to IPV services.
In-depth qualitative interviews were undertaken from October-November 2020 with 24 women who experienced IPV during recent pregnancy to understand the needs and unmet needs of IPV survivors in Ethiopia amid the COVID-19 pandemic. Trained qualitative interviewers used a structured note-taking tool to allow probing of experiences, while permitting rapid analysis for timely results. Inductive thematic analysis identified emergent themes, which were organized into matrices for synthesis.
Qualitative themes center around knowledge of IPV services; experiences of women in seeking services; challenges in accessing services; the impact of COVID-19 on resource access; and persistent unmet needs of IPV survivors. Notably, few women discussed the violence they experienced as unique to pregnancy, with most referring to IPV over an extended period, both prior to and during COVID-19 restrictions. The majority of IPV survivors in our study heavily relied on their informal network of family and friends for protection and assistance in resolving the violence. Though formal IPV services remained open throughout the pandemic, restrictions resulted in the perception that services were not available, and this perception discouraged survivors from seeking help. Survivors further identified lack of integrated and tailored services as enduring unmet needs.
Results reveal a persistent low awareness and utilization of formal IPV support and urge future policy efforts to address unmet needs through expansion of services by reducing socio-cultural barriers. COVID-19 impacted access to both formal and informal support systems, highlighting needs for adaptable, remote service delivery and upstream violence prevention. Public health interventions must strengthen linkages between formal and informal resources to fill the unmet needs of IPV survivors in receiving medical, psychosocial, and legal support in their home communities.
全球有 2-14%的孕妇经历过亲密伴侣暴力(IPV)。及时应对 IPV 对于减轻相关不良健康后果至关重要。在埃塞俄比亚等中低收入国家(LMICs),获取有限的 IPV 支持服务存在诸多障碍,主要障碍包括不信任、污名化和自责,这使妇女不愿透露自己的经历。COVID-19 的感染控制措施有可能进一步阻碍获取 IPV 服务的机会。
2020 年 10 月至 11 月,我们对 24 名最近怀孕期间经历过 IPV 的妇女进行了深入的定性访谈,以了解 COVID-19 大流行期间埃塞俄比亚 IPV 幸存者的需求和未满足的需求。经过培训的定性访谈者使用结构化的笔记工具来允许探查经验,同时允许快速分析以获得及时的结果。归纳主题分析确定了出现的主题,并将其组织成矩阵进行综合。
定性主题围绕着对 IPV 服务的了解;妇女寻求服务的经验;获取服务的挑战;COVID-19 对资源获取的影响;以及 IPV 幸存者持续未得到满足的需求。值得注意的是,很少有妇女将她们所经历的暴力视为与怀孕有关的独特暴力,大多数妇女提到的暴力是在怀孕前和 COVID-19 限制期间长期存在的。我们研究中的大多数 IPV 幸存者严重依赖他们的家庭和朋友的非正式网络来保护和帮助解决暴力问题。尽管整个大流行期间正式的 IPV 服务仍然开放,但限制导致人们认为服务不可用,这种看法使幸存者不愿寻求帮助。幸存者进一步确定缺乏综合和定制的服务是持久的未满足的需求。
结果显示,对正式的 IPV 支持的认识和利用率仍然很低,并敦促未来的政策努力通过减少社会文化障碍来扩大服务,以满足未得到满足的需求。COVID-19 影响了正式和非正式支持系统的获取,突出了需要适应远程服务交付和上游暴力预防。公共卫生干预措施必须加强正式和非正式资源之间的联系,以满足 IPV 幸存者在其家庭社区获得医疗、心理社会和法律支持的未满足需求。