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First published online May 19, 2021

Wealth Inequality and Intimate Partner Violence: An Individual and Ecological Level Analysis Across 20 Countries

Abstract

Intimate Partner Violence (IPV) has been linked to poor health. Economic position may be an important risk factor for IPV. We examined the association between economic position and IPV at country and individual levels. We analyzed Demographic and Health Surveys data of 187,716 ever-partnered women between ages 10 and 59 from 20 low- and middle-income countries. We calculated direct age-standardized 12-month prevalence of physical IPV and performed ecological analysis using Gini coefficients and Concentration indexes to assess correlation with 12-month prevalence of physical IPV. We conducted multivariable logistic regression for each country to assess the association between wealth status and physical IPV and a meta-analysis of the regression model to present results across countries. Compared to the Poorest quintile, odds of IPV among wealthier quintiles varied by country. In the Middle quintile, India had significantly reduced IPV (OR 0.75, 95%CI: 0.68-0.83). In the Richer and Richest quintiles, 4 and 6 countries had significant reductions in IPV, respectively. Only Mozambique was found to have significant increased IPV in the wealthiest quintile (OR 2.51, 95%CI: 1.45-4.38). Gini coefficient and physical IPV had a correlation coefficient of 0.502 (p value 0.033), while Concentration index had –0.276 (p value .253). Standardized prevalence for physical IPV ranged from 1.58% to 18.91%. Findings suggest that the relationship between wealth and IPV vary considerably in the included low- and middle-income countries, and that risk of IPV may not necessarily be higher among women in lower wealth brackets. Mozambique was the only country with increased odds of IPV among the Richest group as compared to the Poorest group. This study provides evidence IPV may transcend economic boundaries, and that studies looking at the link between inequality and IPV are paramount for designing adequate preventative policies.

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Author Biographies

Samuel Kebede, MD MPhil, is a resident physician in the primary care and social medicine program of the Department of Medicine at Albert Einstein College of Medicine and Montefiore Hospital. He has performed various public health research projects focusing in low- and middle-income countries. Dr Kebede has also worked in various collaborative public health projects focusing on HIV and HCV testing and prevention in Baltimore, Maryland. He received a degree in public health from Johns Hopkins University, his MD at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai, and a masters in epidemiology from the University of Cambridge where he was a Gates-Cambridge Scholar.
Anne-Laura Van Harmelen, PhD, is a professor of Brain, Safety and Resilience at the Department of Education and Child Studies at Leiden University. Van Harmelen examines the interactions between social and neurocognitive mechanisms that aid adolescent resilience or vulnerability in the aftermath of childhood adversity. Van Harmelen received her PhD in Psychology from Leiden University in 2013 on the impact of childhood emotional maltreatment on the brain and cognition, and was awarded Rubicon (2014-2016) and Royal Society Dorothy Hodgkin Fellowships (2016-2020) to examine the mechanisms of resilience at the University of Cambridge.
Andres Roman-Urrestarazu, MD, PhD, is a senior research associate at the Department of Psychiatry, University of Cambridge working on the Population Evidence and Data Science of the Applied Health Research & Collaboration of the National Institute of Health Research. He is also Harkness Fellow in Health Care Policy and Practice (2021-2022), assistant professor at Maastricht University in the Department of International Health and Consultant Clinical Academic Staff at Public Health England. He has held appointments as Gillings Fellow in Global Public Health (2016-2020) and Director of Studies in Psychology and Behavioural Science in Trinity Hall (2014-2016), both at the University of Cambridge, and Research Officer in Health Economics and Health Policy at the London School of Economics (2014-2016). His combined expertise in public mental health lies in the intersection of health inequalities, and the economic determinants of adverse mental health outcomes in fields ranging from substance abuse and intimate partner violence across multiple sociocultural contexts.

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Article first published online: May 19, 2021
Issue published: September 2022

Keywords

  1. community violence
  2. domestic violence
  3. predicting domestic violence
  4. assessment of domestic violence
  5. cultural context of domestic violence

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© 2021 SAGE Publications.
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PubMed: 34011189

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Samuel Kebede
Anne-Laura Van Harmelen
Leiden University, Leiden, Netherlands
Andres Roman-Urrestarazu
University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK
University of Maastricht, Netherlands

Notes

Samuel Kebede, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Bronx, NY 10467, USA. Email: [email protected]

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