Fahme Sasha Abdallah, Chehab Sara, Logie Carmen Helen, Mumtaz Ghina, Fitzgerald Daniel, Downs Jennifer Alzos, DeJong Jocelyn, Sieverding Maia
Center for Global Health, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, New York, United States of America.
Department of Medicine, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, New York, United States of America.
PLOS Glob Public Health. 2024 Aug 8;4(8):e0003507. doi: 10.1371/journal.pgph.0003507. eCollection 2024.
Conflict-affected women and girls living in protracted forced displacement settings are vulnerable to sexually transmitted infections (STIs). Yet, little is known about the risk factors for and lived experiences of STIs in complex humanitarian settings, particularly in the Middle East and North Africa, where STIs have long been understudied. This qualitative study adapts the social ecological model to characterize the multi-level risks for and lived experiences of STIs among Syrian refugee women resettled in an urban refugee camp in Beirut, Lebanon. Adopting a community-based sampling strategy, community health workers, who were refugee women from the camp, recruited and conducted in-depth interviews (IDIs) with 30 adult Syrian refugee women. Data were analyzed using an interpretative phenomenological approach and thematically organized according to the levels of the social ecological model. We identified a confluence of individual, interpersonal, community-based, and societal vulnerabilities to STIs, including extreme poverty and insecurity, patriarchal gender norms, stigma, sexual exploitation and trafficking, poor healthcare accessibility, intimate partner violence, including marital rape, transactional sex, sexual harassment, social isolation, and internalized stigma. Participants described experiencing bothersome symptoms and sequelae of advanced and untreated STIs in the setting of limited access to health services and challenges with engaging their partners in STI treatment, largely due to STI stigma. These novel findings suggest dynamic, interrelated social and health disparities across all social ecological levels influencing refugee women's sexual health, including their risk of STIs. Comprehensive, multi-sectorial interventions, which transcend traditional public health methods and which adopt a sexual well-being approach, are urgently needed to address systemic and intrapersonal violence against refugee women, examine and mitigate the burden of STIs, and ensure sexual justice and health equity in this protracted forced displacement setting.
生活在长期被迫流离失所环境中的受冲突影响的妇女和女孩易感染性传播感染(STIs)。然而,对于复杂人道主义环境中,尤其是中东和北非地区性传播感染的风险因素和实际经历,我们知之甚少,因为长期以来该地区对性传播感染的研究不足。这项定性研究采用社会生态模型,以描述在黎巴嫩贝鲁特一个城市难民营重新安置的叙利亚难民妇女中性传播感染的多层次风险和实际经历。采用基于社区的抽样策略,来自该营地的难民妇女社区卫生工作者招募并对30名成年叙利亚难民妇女进行了深入访谈(IDIs)。使用解释性现象学方法对数据进行分析,并根据社会生态模型的层次进行主题组织。我们确定了个人、人际、社区和社会层面易感染性传播感染的多种因素,包括极端贫困和不安全、父权制性别规范、耻辱感、性剥削和人口贩运、医疗服务可及性差、亲密伴侣暴力(包括婚内强奸)、交易性行为、性骚扰、社会孤立和内化耻辱感。参与者描述了在获得医疗服务有限以及让伴侣参与性传播感染治疗面临挑战的情况下,经历了晚期和未治疗的性传播感染带来的令人烦恼的症状和后遗症,这主要是由于性传播感染的耻辱感所致。这些新发现表明,在所有社会生态层面存在动态、相互关联的社会和健康差异,影响着难民妇女的性健康,包括她们感染性传播感染的风险。迫切需要全面、多部门的干预措施,超越传统的公共卫生方法,采用性健康福祉方法,以解决针对难民妇女的系统性和人际暴力问题,检查并减轻性传播感染的负担,并确保在这种长期被迫流离失所的环境中实现性公正和健康公平。