Intimate partner violence against women in rural Vietnam : prevalance, risk factors, health effects and suggestions for interventions
Background: Vietnam has undergone a rapid transition in the past 20 years, moving towards a more equal situation for men and women. However, Confucian doctrine is still strong and little is known about men s violence against women within the Vietnamese family. Aim: To improve knowledge of intimate p...
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Zusammenfassung: | Background: Vietnam has undergone a rapid transition in the past 20
years, moving towards a more equal situation for men and women. However,
Confucian doctrine is still strong and little is known about men s
violence against women within the Vietnamese family.
Aim: To improve knowledge of intimate partner violence (IPV) in a
Vietnamese context, by focusing on professionals and trusted community
inhabitants explanations of the violence and their suggestions for
preventive activities. Further, to present data on prevalence, risk
factors and health effects and to suggest appropriate intervention and
prevention activities.
Method: Qualitative and quantitative data were collected in the rural
district, Ba Vi in northern Vietnam in 2002. Five focus group discussions
were held and face-to-face interviews following a questionnaire developed
by WHO for violence research were performed. In the epidemiological part,
883 married/partnered women aged 17 60 were included. Bi- and
multivariate analyses were undertaken, with effect modification analyses
and calculation of attributable fractions and population attributable
fractions.
Main findings: In the explorative qualitative study, intimate partner
violence was explained as interplay between individual and family-related
factors and socio-cultural norms and practices where Confucian ideology
exerted a strong influence (paper I). It further revealed that IPV was
rarely discussed openly in the community and women subjected to violence
kept silent. The epidemiological study revealed that out of the 883 married/partnered
women, 30.9% had been subjected to physical violence in their lifetime,
and 8.3% in the preceding year. For the combined exposure to physical and
sexual violence, the corresponding figures were 32.7% and 9.2%. The most
commonly occurring form was psychological abuse (lifetime 55.4%; past
year 33.7%). Lifetime experience of sexual violence was reported by 6.6%
of the women, and by 2.2% for previous year exposure. In the majority of
cases, the violence was exerted as repeated acts (paper II).
The risk factors found for lifetime and past year physical/sexual
violence were women s low education, husbands low education, low
household income and male polygamy. The pattern of factors associated
with psychological abuse alone were husband s low professional status and
women s intermediate level of education (paper II). Women who witnessed
interparental violence during childhood were significantly more likely to
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