Who seeks care after intimate partner violence in Cameroon? sociodemographic differences between a hospital and population sample of women

Little is known regarding health care seeking behaviors of women in sub-Saharan Africa, specifically Cameroon, who experience violence. The proportion of women who experienced violence enrolled in the Cameroon Trauma Registry (CTR) is lower than expected. We concatenated the databases from the Octob...

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Veröffentlicht in:PLOS global public health 2024, Vol.4 (7), p.e0003408
Hauptverfasser: Yost, Mark T, Blair, Kevin J, Poppens, McKayla, Mallahi, Michelle, Dang, Lauren Eyler, Oke, Rasheedat, Carvalho, Melissa, Etoundi-Mballa, Georges Alain, Hubbard, Alan, Kouo Ngamby, Marquise, Maqungo, Sithombo, Chironga, Kudzai, McCoy, Sandra I, Chichom-Mefire, Alain, Juillard, Catherine, Maswime, Salome, Dissak Delon, Fanny Nadia
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Little is known regarding health care seeking behaviors of women in sub-Saharan Africa, specifically Cameroon, who experience violence. The proportion of women who experienced violence enrolled in the Cameroon Trauma Registry (CTR) is lower than expected. We concatenated the databases from the October 2017-December 2020 CTR and 2018 Cameroon Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) into a singular database for cross-sectional study. Continuous and categorical variables were compared with Wilcoxon rank-sum and Fisher's exact test. Multivariable logistic regression examined associations between demographic factors and women belonging to the DHS or CTR cohort. We performed additional classification tree and random forest variable importance analyses. 276 women (13%) in the CTR and 197 (13.1%) of women in the DHS endorsed violence from any perpetrator. A larger percentage of women in the DHS reported violence from an intimate partner (71.6% vs. 42.7%, p
ISSN:2767-3375
2767-3375
DOI:10.1371/journal.pgph.0003408