Association between Intimate Partner Violence, Knowledge and Use of Contraception in Africa: Comparative Analysis across Five African Regions.

International Journal of MCH and AIDS Pub Date : 2020-01-01 Epub Date: 2019-12-28 DOI:10.21106/ijma.323
Rafeek A Yusuf, Deepa Dongarwar, Zenab I Yusuf, Hamisu M Salihu
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Abstract

Background or objectives: Intimate partner violence (IPV) against women is common globally, and is associated with several adverse consequences. This study provides a comparative analysis of potential regional differences in the association between IPV and knowledge and use of contraceptives within Africa.

Methods: A multi-country cross-sectional study was conducted using data on women of reproductive age 15-49 years from the Demographic and Health Surveys covering five African regions. Exposure and outcome variables were IPV and reproductive literacy (comprising modern contraception knowledge and contraception usage) respectively. We used survey log-binomial regression models to generate prevalence ratios that estimated the association between IPV versus knowledge and usage of modern contraception.

Results: Overall IPV prevalence in Africa was 30.8% with notable regional differences. Demographic, socioeconomic, and reproductive history markers of IPV were more pronounced in younger women, rural residents, women of low socioeconomic status and those with copious knowledge but poor usage of modern contraception. The level of knowledge of contraception was 84% greater among African women who were victims of IPV compared to their counterparts who were not victims of IPV (p < 0.0001). IPV was not associated with actual usage of modern contraception (p = 0.21).

Conclusion and global health implications: IPV against women in Africa may incentivize knowledge seeking of modern contraception as protective mechanisms. Regional variations notwithstanding, understanding the existing and new characteristics predictive of IPV may inform policy development, resource allocation and prevention of IPV globally.

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非洲亲密伴侣暴力、避孕知识和使用之间的关系:非洲五个地区的比较分析。
背景或目标:针对妇女的亲密伴侣暴力(IPV)在全球范围内十分常见,并与多种不良后果相关联。本研究对非洲地区内 IPV 与避孕药具知识和使用之间的潜在区域差异进行了比较分析:这项多国横截面研究使用了非洲五个地区人口与健康调查中 15-49 岁育龄妇女的数据。暴露变量和结果变量分别为 IPV 和生殖知识(包括现代避孕知识和避孕措施的使用)。我们使用调查对数二项式回归模型生成流行率比,以估计 IPV 与现代避孕知识和使用之间的关联:结果:非洲 IPV 的总体流行率为 30.8%,地区差异明显。年轻女性、农村居民、社会经济地位较低的女性以及现代避孕知识丰富但使用率较低的女性中,IPV 的人口、社会经济和生育史标记更为明显。与未遭受过 IPV 的非洲妇女相比,遭受过 IPV 的非洲妇女的避孕知识水平要高出 84%(p < 0.0001)。IPV与实际使用现代避孕方法无关(p = 0.21):非洲妇女遭受的 IPV 可能会促使她们寻求现代避孕知识作为保护机制。尽管存在地区差异,但了解可预测 IPV 的现有特征和新特征可为全球 IPV 的政策制定、资源分配和预防提供依据。
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