Department of Health Sciences, Sacred Heart University, Fairfield, 06825, USA.
Department of Psychology, Emory University, Atlanta, 30322, USA.
BMC Public Health. 2024 Jan 2;24(1):51. doi: 10.1186/s12889-023-17546-y.
The necessary execution of non-pharmaceutical risk-mitigation (NPRM) strategies to reduce the transmission of COVID-19 has created an unprecedented natural experiment to ascertain whether pandemic-induced social-policy interventions may elevate collateral health risks. Here, we assess the effects on violence against women (VAW) of the duration of NPRM measures that were executed through jurisdictional-level orders in the United States. We expect that stay-at-home orders, by reducing mobility and disrupting non-coresident social ties, are associated with higher incident reporting of VAW.
We used aggregate data from the Murder Accountability Project from January 2019 through December 2020, to estimate count models examining the effects of the duration of jurisdictional-level (N = 51) stay-at-home orders on femicide. Additionally, we used data from the National Incident-Based Reporting System to estimate a series of count models that examined the effects of the duration of jurisdictional-level (N = 26) stay-at-home orders on non-lethal violence against women, including five separate measures of intimate partner violence (IPV) and a measure of non-partner sexual violence.
Results from the count models indicated that femicide was not associated with COVID-19 mitigation strategies when adjusted for seasonal effects. However, we found certain measures of non-lethal VAW to be significantly associated in adjusted models. Specifically, reported physical and economic IPV were positively associated with stay-at-home orders while psychological IPV and non-partner sexual violence were negatively associated with stay-at-home orders. The combination measure of all forms of IPV was positively associated with the duration of stay-at-home orders, indicating a net increase in risk of IPV during lockdowns.
The benefits of risk-mitigation strategies to reduce the health impacts directly associated with a pandemic should be weighed against their costs with respect to women's heightened exposure to certain forms of violence and the potentially cascading impacts of such exposure on health. The effects of COVID-19 NPRM strategies on IPV risk nationally and its immediate and long-term health sequelae should be studied, with stressors like ongoing pandemic-related economic hardship and substance misuse still unfolding. Findings should inform the development of social policies to mitigate the collateral impacts of crisis-response efforts on the risk of VAW and its cascading sequelae.
为降低 COVID-19 传播而执行非药物风险缓解(NPRM)策略是史无前例的自然实验,可以确定大流行期间的社会政策干预是否会增加附带健康风险。在这里,我们评估了美国各级司法管辖区命令执行的 NPRM 措施的持续时间对针对妇女的暴力行为(VAW)的影响。我们预计,居家令通过减少流动性和扰乱非居民社会关系,与更高的 VAW 事件报告率有关。
我们使用 2019 年 1 月至 2020 年 12 月期间谋杀问责项目的汇总数据,估计了检验司法管辖区层面(N=51)居家令持续时间对杀害女性的影响的计数模型。此外,我们使用国家基于事件的报告系统的数据,估计了一系列计数模型,检验了司法管辖区层面(N=26)居家令持续时间对非致命性针对妇女的暴力行为的影响,包括五种不同的亲密伴侣暴力(IPV)措施和非伴侣性暴力措施。
在调整季节性影响后,计数模型的结果表明,杀害女性与 COVID-19 缓解策略无关。然而,我们发现某些非致命性 VAW 措施在调整后的模型中具有显著相关性。具体而言,报告的身体和经济 IPV 与居家令呈正相关,而心理 IPV 和非伴侣性暴力与居家令呈负相关。所有形式的 IPV 的综合措施与居家令的持续时间呈正相关,表明在封锁期间 IPV 的风险增加。
在权衡减轻与大流行直接相关的健康影响的风险缓解策略的好处时,应考虑其对妇女面临某些形式暴力的风险增加的成本,以及这种暴露对健康的潜在连锁影响。应该研究全国范围内 COVID-19 NPRM 策略对 IPV 风险的影响及其直接和长期的健康后果,而持续的大流行相关经济困难和药物滥用等压力因素仍在显现。研究结果应有助于制定社会政策,减轻危机应对努力对 VAW 风险及其连锁后果的附带影响。