TY - JOUR PY - 2014// TI - Predictors of help-seeking behaviour among women exposed to violence in Nigeria: A multilevel analysis to evaluate the impact of contextual and individual factors JO - Journal of epidemiology and community health A1 - Kawachi, Ichiro A1 - Subramanian, S. V. A1 - Berkman, Lisa A1 - Slopen, Natalie A1 - Linos, Natalia SP - 211 EP - 217 VL - 68 IS - 3 N2 - OBJECTIVES: To simultaneously examine contextual and individual-level predictors of help-seeking behaviour among women exposed to physical and sexual violence in Nigeria. DESIGN: A multi-level cross-sectional study. We fit three 3-level random intercepts models to examine contextual and individual-level characteristics associated with help seeking, simultaneously. SETTING: Nigerian Demographic and Health Survey for 2008. PARTICIPANTS: 5553 women (15-49 years) who reported physical or sexual violence, drawn from 23 715 women in the Nigerian Demographic and Health Survey that responded to questions on violence exposure. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Help seeking to prevent future victimisation was based on self-report. RESULTS: In our sample of women exposed to physical and sexual violence, 39.7% reported that they sought help to stop the perpetrator from hurting them again. Rates of help seeking were geographically patterned by state (range: 12% to 65%). State-level development, measured by the Human Development Index (z-score), was positively associated with help seeking (OR=1.30, 95% CI 1.05 to 1.61), after adjusting for individual-level characteristics. State-level prevalence of violence against women (z-score) was negatively associated with help-seeking (OR=0.68, 95% CI 0.55 to 0.84), suggesting that service providers who may target their programmes to areas with high prevalence of violence, may need to simultaneously address barriers to help seeking. Few individual-level characteristics were associated with help seeking, including wealth, marital status, employment status, ethnicity, history of witnessing domestic violence and relationship to perpetrator. CONCLUSIONS: Efforts to support female survivors of violence should consider broader social and contextual determinants that are associated with help-seeking behaviours.
Language: en
LA - en SN - 0143-005X UR - http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/jech-2012-202187 ID - ref1 ER -