Gordon Anna C T, Mamluk Loubaba
Elizabeth Blackwell Institute, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK.
Bristol Medical School, National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Applied Research Collaboration (ARC) West, Population Health Sciences, University of Bristol, Bristol, UK.
Discov Soc Sci Health. 2024;4(1):40. doi: 10.1007/s44155-024-00089-x. Epub 2024 Sep 10.
Conflict in Syria since 2011 led to over one million Syrians fleeing to Lebanon, predominantly from economically disadvantaged areas with low literacy and high child marriage rates. Over 90% live in extreme poverty, in informal tented settlements with minimal access to education, healthcare or employment. Displacement and poverty have further increased early marriages and unplanned pregnancies, and curtailed access to sexual and reproductive healthcare (SRH) in the Bekaa valley. This is exacerbated by increasing rates of sexual and gender-based violence (SGBV), intimate partner violence and domestic violence.
We aimed to explore SRH beliefs and practices and teach on key SRH topics through focus group discussions (FGD) and questionnaires, co-designed with Syrian practitioners, conducted with Syrian men and women. FGD were recorded, transcribed and thematically analysed. Questionnaires collected demographics and explored SRH beliefs and practices.
24 FGD with 203 participants, 72.4% female and 27.6% men. 90.1% participants were married with an average age-gap of 6.3 years between partners. Teenage marriage rates were 55.6% for women, and 47.4% delivered their first child before the age of 20. 43.6% participants were not using any contraception. Findings demonstrate the impacts of SRH cultural norms and changes due to displacement, financial crisis, and increased exposure to technology and NGOs.
SRH is multifaceted and contested, requiring systemic improvements in access to care, employment and education. This small but important proof-of-concept study demonstrates the possibility of engaging men and women in SRH discussion; paramount to empowering communities and challenging intergenerational SGBV.
自2011年以来,叙利亚的冲突导致超过100万叙利亚人逃往黎巴嫩,其中大多数来自经济弱势地区,这些地区识字率低且童婚率高。超过90%的人生活在极端贫困中,居住在非正式帐篷定居点,获得教育、医疗或就业的机会极少。流离失所和贫困进一步增加了早婚和意外怀孕的情况,并减少了贝卡谷地获得性与生殖健康服务(SRH)的机会。性暴力和基于性别的暴力(SGBV)、亲密伴侣暴力和家庭暴力发生率的上升使这一情况更加恶化。
我们旨在通过与叙利亚从业者共同设计的焦点小组讨论(FGD)和问卷调查,探讨性与生殖健康的观念和做法,并就关键的性与生殖健康主题进行授课,参与者为叙利亚男性和女性。FGD被记录、转录并进行主题分析。问卷收集了人口统计学信息,并探讨了性与生殖健康的观念和做法。
进行了24次FGD,共有203名参与者,其中女性占72.4%,男性占27.6%。90.1%的参与者已婚,伴侣之间的平均年龄差为6.3岁。女性的青少年结婚率为55.6%,47.4% 的女性在20岁之前生育了第一个孩子。43.6%的参与者未使用任何避孕措施。研究结果表明了性与生殖健康文化规范以及因流离失所、金融危机以及接触技术和非政府组织增加而产生的变化所带来的影响。
性与生殖健康是多方面的且存在争议,需要在获得护理、就业和教育方面进行系统性改善。这项规模虽小但重要的概念验证研究表明,让男性和女性参与性与生殖健康讨论是有可能实现的;这对于增强社区权能和挑战代际性暴力和基于性别的暴力至关重要