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Journal Article

Citation

Daruwalla N, Kanougiya S, Gupta A, Gram L, Osrin D. BMJ Open 2020; 10(12): e042444.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2020, BMJ Publishing Group)

DOI

10.1136/bmjopen-2020-042444

PMID

33328262

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Domestic violence against women harms individuals, families, communities and society. Perpetrated by intimate partners or other family members, its overlapping forms include physical, sexual and emotional violence, control and neglect. We aimed to describe the prevalence of these forms of violence and their perpetrators in informal settlements in Mumbai.

DESIGN: Cross-sectional survey.

SETTING: Two large urban informal settlement areas.

PARTICIPANTS: 5122 women aged 18-49 years.

PRIMARY AND SECONDARY OUTCOME MEASURES: Prevalence and perpetrators in the last year of physical, sexual and emotional domestic violence, coercive control and neglect. For each of these forms of violence, responses to questions about individual acts and composite estimates.

RESULTS: In the last year, 644 (13%) women had experienced physical domestic violence, 188 (4%) sexual violence and 963 (19%) emotional violence. Of ever-married women, 13% had experienced physical or sexual intimate partner violence in the last year. Most physical (87%) and sexual violence (99%) was done by partners, but emotional violence equally involved marital family members. All three forms of violence were more common if women were younger, in the lowest socioeconomic asset quintile or reported disability. 1816 women (35%) had experienced at least one instance of coercive control and 33% said that they were afraid of people in their home. 10% reported domestic neglect of their food, sleep, health or children's health.

CONCLUSIONS: Domestic violence against women remains common in urban informal settlements. Physical and sexual violence were perpetrated mainly by intimate partners, but emotional violence was attributed equally to partners and marital family. More than one-third of women described controlling behaviours perpetrated by both intimate partners and marital family members. We emphasise the need to include the spectrum of perpetrators and forms of domestic violence-particularly emotional violence and coercive control-in data gathering.

TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: ISRCTN84502355; Pre-results.


Language: en

Keywords

epidemiology; primary care; public health

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