Mitiku Kindie, Shiwasinad Sisay, Shiferaw Solomon
School of Public Health, College of Health Sciences, Debre Tabor University.
Department of Pediatric and Child Health Nursing, College of Health Sciences, Debre Berhan University.
PLoS One. 2025 Aug 13;20(8):e0329840. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0329840. eCollection 2025.
Gender-based violence (GBV) is a major health problem affecting displaced populations disproportionately. However, limited research existed on the prevalence, barriers, and facilitators for survivors seeking care.
This study aims to estimate the prevalence of GBV and investigate the barriers and facilitators influencing survivors' access to care.
A mixed-methods cross-sectional study was conducted in 2024 involving 1,863 women. Women were recruited through random sampling. The qualitative component included five NGO workers and eleven GBV survivors, who were selected purposively. Quantitative data were collected using the Assessment Screen to Identify Survivors Toolkit. The qualitative data were analysed thematically with Atlas Ti 8, guided by the socio-ecological framework.
Nearly one-third (31%) of women experienced GBV, with 25.2% of them facing it in the past year. The most common types of violence were threats of violence (32.1%), physical violence (25.8%), forced marriage (19.1%), and sexual violence (10.0%). Nearly 80% of GBV incidents took place in IDP camps, mainly perpetrated by intimate partners and family members. Barriers to seeking GBV services at the individual level included self-isolation, reluctance to disclose survivor status, and lack of awareness. Community-level restrictions comprised social stigma, gossip, and inadequate social support, while institutional challenges involved budget constraints and a lack of confidentiality. Structural barriers included camp overcrowding, insecurity, and mistrust in the justice system. Self-efficacy acted as an individual-level enabler for survivors to seek care. Enablers at the institutional level included support from NGOs, access to secure housing, and availability of a one-stop centre. Access to community-based GBV workers was viewed as a crucial community-level facilitator for survivors seeking care.
GBV is widespread among internally displaced women, particularly in camps. Despite the presence of some facilitators, GBV survivors encounter numerous barriers at all levels of the socio-ecological framework. Overcoming these barriers requires comprehensive and coordinated efforts. Key strategies include increasing awareness of the available GBV services, reducing community stigma, building supportive networks, safeguarding survivors' privacy, decreasing overcrowding in camps, enhancing security measures, and rebuilding trust in justice systems.
基于性别的暴力(GBV)是一个重大的健康问题,对流离失所人群的影响尤为严重。然而,关于幸存者寻求护理的患病率、障碍和促进因素的研究有限。
本研究旨在估计GBV的患病率,并调查影响幸存者获得护理的障碍和促进因素。
2024年进行了一项混合方法的横断面研究,涉及1863名女性。通过随机抽样招募女性。定性部分包括五名非政府组织工作人员和十一名GBV幸存者,他们是有目的地挑选出来的。使用评估筛查识别幸存者工具包收集定量数据。定性数据在社会生态框架的指导下,使用Atlas Ti 8进行主题分析。
近三分之一(31%)的女性经历过GBV,其中25.2%的女性在过去一年中遭受过GBV。最常见的暴力类型是暴力威胁(32.1%)、身体暴力(25.8%)、强迫婚姻(19.1%)和性暴力(10.0%)。近80%的GBV事件发生在境内流离失所者营地,主要由亲密伴侣和家庭成员实施。在个人层面,寻求GBV服务的障碍包括自我隔离、不愿透露幸存者身份以及缺乏认识。社区层面的限制包括社会耻辱感、流言蜚语和社会支持不足,而机构层面的挑战包括预算限制和缺乏保密性。结构性障碍包括营地过度拥挤、不安全以及对司法系统的不信任。自我效能感是幸存者寻求护理的个人层面的促进因素。机构层面的促进因素包括非政府组织的支持、获得安全住房以及一站式中心的可用性。接触社区GBV工作人员被视为幸存者寻求护理的关键社区层面的促进因素。
GBV在境内流离失所妇女中普遍存在,特别是在营地。尽管存在一些促进因素,但GBV幸存者在社会生态框架的各个层面都遇到了许多障碍。克服这些障碍需要全面和协调的努力。关键策略包括提高对现有GBV服务的认识、减少社区耻辱感、建立支持网络、保护幸存者隐私、减少营地拥挤、加强安全措施以及重建对司法系统的信任。