Intimate Partner Violence and Women's Mental Health during the COVID-19 Pandemic in Brazil.

Angelica Cerveira de Baumont, Géssica Sá Oliveira, Juliana Bastos de Figueiredo, Júlia Foschiera Dos Santos, Bruna Pasqualini Genro, Luísa Fernanda Habigzang, Gisele Gus Manfro
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Abstract

Background: Intimate partner violence (IPV) increased extensively around the world during the pandemic, causing severe women's mental health damages. However, there are no studies showing these effects in Brazil.

Purpose: To assess the perpetration of IPV and the presence of depression and suicidal ideation in women living in Brazil during the pandemic.

Methods: Cross-sectional online survey including women living in Brazil from July 2020 to Jun 2021. Participants answered a 43-item self-applied questionnaire exploring their characteristics and life changes due to the pandemic (CoRonavIruS Health Impact Survey), IPV (World Health Organization Violence Against Women) and depressive symptoms or suicidal ideation (Patient Health Questionnaire-9). We used multiple Poisson regression analyses with robust variance to model associations between IPV and mental health outcomes, considering as covariates aspects of social vulnerability.

Results: We found a high frequency of IPV (33.3%), depression (36.1%) and suicidal ideation (19.8%) among the participants. IPV was significantly associated with depression (PR=1.502, p=0.001 for one type of IPV; PR=2.702, p<0.001 for two or three types of IPV) and suicidal ideation (PR=2.264, p<0.001 for one type of VPI; PR=3.272, p<0.001 for two or three types of IPV). Food insecurity, being black, lower educational levels and being in a relationship with a person of the same gender were associated with one or both mental health outcomes.

Conclusions: We demonstrated an association of IPV with higher frequencies of depression and suicidal ideation in women living in Brazil during the COVID-19 pandemic, highlighting the urgency of strengthening strategies to protect women during adversities.

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巴西COVID-19大流行期间的亲密伴侣暴力和妇女心理健康。
背景:在大流行期间,亲密伴侣暴力(IPV)在世界各地广泛增加,对妇女的精神健康造成严重损害。然而,在巴西没有研究显示这些影响。目的:评估大流行期间生活在巴西的妇女中IPV的实施以及抑郁和自杀意念的存在。方法:对2020年7月至2021年6月居住在巴西的女性进行横断面在线调查。参与者填写了一份43项自填问卷,探讨他们的特征和因新冠病毒健康影响调查(冠状病毒健康影响调查)、IPV(世界卫生组织暴力侵害妇女行为)以及抑郁症状或自杀念头(患者健康问卷-9)而导致的生活变化。考虑到社会脆弱性的协变量,我们使用多元泊松回归分析来建立IPV和心理健康结果之间的关联模型。结果:调查对象中IPV(33.3%)、抑郁(36.1%)和自杀意念(19.8%)发生率较高。IPV与抑郁显著相关(PR=1.502, p=0.001);结论:我们发现,在2019冠状病毒病大流行期间,生活在巴西的女性中,IPV与更高频率的抑郁和自杀意念存在关联,这凸显了在逆境中加强保护女性战略的紧迫性。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.40
自引率
0.00%
发文量
32
审稿时长
13 weeks
期刊介绍: Information not localized
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