Sipilä Marianne, Helminen Mika, Hakulinen Tuovi, Paavilainen Eija
Department of Health Sciences, Faculty of Social Sciences, Tampere University, Tampere, Finland.
Department of Welfare Epidemiology and Monitoring, Unit of Register-Based Research and Modelling, National Institute for Health and Welfare (THL), Helsinki, Finland.
Matern Child Health J. 2025 Jan;29(1):114-125. doi: 10.1007/s10995-024-04021-2. Epub 2024 Nov 29.
Existing research has shown that parental exposure to violence has negative consequences on health outcomes, but the effect of such exposure on unmet health care and social service need is unknown. This study aims to investigate the association between unmet health care and social services and parental violence exposure among parents with children.
This study used the data of 6289 parents aged 18-60 years who had at least one child under 18 years living in the same household. Parental violence exposure was measured. Unmet child and adult health care and social service need was operationalized through questions on the services needed, those that had not been received, and those that were considered inadequate.
Parents who experienced any kind of violence had more unmet service need. There were more women among parents with violence experience (65.4%) than those with no violence experience (51.9%). Violence experience increased the odds of unmet need for general adult healthcare services (OR 2.02, CI 1.64-2.57), maternity and child health clinics (OR 2.52, CI 2.00-3.18), family guidance clinics and home help (OR 2.38, CI 1.60-3.54), mental health or child welfare services (OR 2.05, CI 1.52-2.75), and school health care (OR 1.99, 1.50-2.65). After adjusting for sociodemographic factors, the associations between exposure to violence experience and unmet needs for healthcare and social services remained statistically significant.
Violence in close relationships profoundly impacts health and well-being. By addressing unmet health care needs and supporting parents, we can break the cycle of violence and promote better mental health outcomes. Preventive policies and early interventions are essential to mitigate the consequences of violence in families.
现有研究表明,父母遭受暴力会对健康结果产生负面影响,但这种暴露对未满足的医疗保健和社会服务需求的影响尚不清楚。本研究旨在调查有孩子的父母中未满足的医疗保健和社会服务与父母遭受暴力暴露之间的关联。
本研究使用了6289名年龄在18至60岁之间、家中至少有一名18岁以下子女的父母的数据。测量了父母遭受暴力的暴露情况。通过关于所需服务、未接受的服务以及被认为不足的服务的问题,对未满足的儿童和成人医疗保健及社会服务需求进行了操作化定义。
经历过任何形式暴力的父母有更多未满足的服务需求。有暴力经历的父母中女性比例(65.4%)高于无暴力经历的父母(51.9%)。暴力经历增加了未满足一般成人医疗保健服务需求的几率(比值比[OR] 2.02,可信区间[CI] 1.64 - 2.57)、母婴健康诊所需求的几率(OR 2.52,CI 2.00 - 3.18)、家庭指导诊所和家庭帮助需求的几率(OR 2.38,CI 1.60 - 3.54)、心理健康或儿童福利服务需求的几率(OR 2.05,CI 1.52 - 2.75)以及学校医疗保健需求的几率(OR 1.99,1.50 - 2.65)。在调整社会人口学因素后,暴力经历暴露与未满足的医疗保健和社会服务需求之间的关联在统计学上仍具有显著性。
亲密关系中的暴力对健康和幸福有着深远影响。通过满足未满足的医疗保健需求并支持父母,我们可以打破暴力循环,促进更好的心理健康结果。预防性政策和早期干预对于减轻家庭暴力的后果至关重要。