Ram Rajan, Kumar Manish, Goli Srinivas
International Institute for Population Sciences, Mumbai, Maharashtra, 400088, India.
Sci Rep. 2024 Dec 28;14(1):31263. doi: 10.1038/s41598-024-82644-9.
The COVID-19 pandemic has not only posed alarming health challenges but also exacerbated the scenarios of intimate partner violence (IPV) against women globally. While global studies indicate a conspicuous increase in IPV during COVID-19 lockdowns; Indian studies exhibit mixed evidence. This ambiguity in world's most populous country underscores a greater need to examine the nexus between exposure to COVID-19 and IPV using a large nationally representative sample of India. This study employs an 'intent-to-treat (ITT) framework' approach to assess the effect of COVID-19 exposure on IPV for women with "exposure (or cases)" compared to those with "no exposure (or controls)". Using data from National Family Health Survey-5, the study employs a methodology comprising three stages: first, descriptive and bivariate statistics that characterize the sample population. Second, a multivariable logistic regression model was employed to examine the influence of COVID-19 on IPV reporting. Finally, the study validated its main findings using the Propensity Score Matching (PSM) tool with an ITT framework. The result from multiple statistical approaches indicates a reduction in IPV during COVID-19 - primarily suggesting significant under-reporting of domestic violence cases in the data collected during its exposure period. This underreporting remains consistent across diverse socioeconomic backgrounds. The study advances that reduction in the incidents of IPV among women surveyed after exposure to COVID-19 compared to their counterparts can be attributable to underreporting or greater socio-emotional cohesion among partners during menaces like COVID-19. While the under-reporting of cases can also be attributed to the lack of accessibility to peer groups and social and community networks, who often help women to identify and report IPV. Further, it can also possible due to the reduction in alcohol consumption and greater dependency of female on male partners due to jobloss during COVID-19 lockdown. This study, thereby, underscores the need for innovative survey tools to capture Violence Against Women (VAW) in general and IPV in particular during an extraordinary situation like COVID-19.
新冠疫情不仅带来了令人担忧的健康挑战,还加剧了全球范围内针对妇女的亲密伴侣暴力(IPV)情况。虽然全球研究表明,在新冠疫情封锁期间亲密伴侣暴力显著增加;但印度的研究结果却参差不齐。在这个世界上人口最多的国家,这种不确定性凸显了利用印度具有全国代表性的大样本,来研究接触新冠病毒与亲密伴侣暴力之间联系的更大必要性。本研究采用“意向性治疗(ITT)框架”方法,评估与“未接触(或对照组)”的女性相比,“接触(或病例组)”新冠病毒的女性遭受亲密伴侣暴力的情况。该研究使用了来自第五轮全国家庭健康调查的数据,采用了一个包含三个阶段的方法:第一,描述性和双变量统计,用于描述样本总体特征。第二,采用多变量逻辑回归模型,来检验新冠病毒对亲密伴侣暴力报告的影响。最后,该研究使用倾向得分匹配(PSM)工具和ITT框架对其主要发现进行了验证。多种统计方法的结果表明,在新冠疫情期间亲密伴侣暴力有所减少——这主要表明在疫情期间收集的数据中,家庭暴力案件存在大量漏报。这种漏报在不同社会经济背景下都是一致的。该研究提出,与未接触新冠病毒的女性相比,接触新冠病毒后接受调查的女性中亲密伴侣暴力事件减少,可能是由于漏报,或者是在新冠疫情等威胁期间伴侣之间更强的社会情感凝聚力。虽然病例漏报也可能归因于难以接触到同龄人团体以及社会和社区网络,而这些通常有助于女性识别和报告亲密伴侣暴力。此外,这也可能是由于新冠疫情封锁期间酒精消费减少,以及女性因失业而对男性伴侣的依赖性增加。因此,本研究强调了在新冠疫情这样的特殊情况下,需要创新调查工具来全面捕捉暴力侵害妇女行为(VAW),特别是亲密伴侣暴力。