Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-t5tsf Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-13T22:35:07.922Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Association between spousal violence and the incidence of acute respiratory infection among children under five: random-effect modelling using data from Nigeria and Bangladesh

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  03 December 2018

Mian B. Hossain*
Affiliation:
School of Community Health and Policy, Morgan State University, Baltimore, MD, USA
Ifeyinwa Udo
Affiliation:
Udo, Center for Interdisciplinary Research on AIDS, Yale University School of Public Health, USA
James F. Phillips
Affiliation:
Mailman School of Public Health, Columbia University, New York, USA
*
*Corresponding author. Email: mian.hossain@morgan.edu

Abstract

Acute respiratory infection (ARI) is a major cause of mortality among children under the age of five in developing countries. This paper examines Demographic and Health Survey (DHS) data on maternal recall of episodes of ARI in the contrasting settings of Bangladesh and Nigeria, where about 11.1% and 3.3% of under-5 children, respectively, are reported to have symptoms of ARI. The surveys found that about 25.6% of married Bangladeshi women and 15.4% of married Nigerian women reported experiencing spousal violence in the past year. To test the proposition that women’s experience of intimate partner violence (IPV) is associated with adversity in their children, the study examined the relationship between spousal violence in the past year and childhood ARI in the past 2 weeks among children under the age of five in Bangladesh and Nigeria. Data were taken from a nationally representative sample of mothers aged 15–49 years obtained from the 2007 Bangladesh DHS and 2008 Nigeria DHS. Random-effects multiple logistic regression models were estimated to assess the association of maternal exposure to IPV with the incidence of ARI in the past 2 weeks among under-5 children after controlling for the potentially confounding effects of maternal social and demographic characteristics. Results from Nigeria suggest that the odds of ARI incidence among children of mothers who were IPV victims were almost two times higher than among their counterparts whose mothers had not experienced IPV (OR = 1.78; 95% CI: 1.45–2.19; p <0.001). Similarly, the odds for the children of Bangladeshi IPV victims were elevated one and half times (OR = 1.61; 95% CI: 1.21–2.14; p <0.001). The findings suggest that under-5 children suffer indirect health consequences of gender-based violence.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© Cambridge University Press, 2018. 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Ackerson, LK and Subramanian, SV (2009) Intimate partner violence and death among infants and children in India. Pediatrics 124(5), e878e889.Google Scholar
Adam, CM (2006) The consequence of witnessing violence on children and the implications for the family counselors. Family Journal 14, 334341.Google Scholar
Adesina, O, Oyugbo, I, Oladokun, A and Olubukola, A (2011) Prevalence and pattern of violence in pregnancy in Ibadan, south-west Nigeria. Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology (Tokyo, Japan) 31(3), 232.Google Scholar
Ahmed, S, Koenig, M and Stephenson, R (2006) Effect of domestic violence on perinatal and early childhood mortality: evidence from North India. American Journal of Public Health 96(8), 14231428.Google Scholar
Anjum, MU, Riaz, H and Tayyab, HM (2017) Acute respiratory tract infections (ARIS); clinico-epidemiolocal profile in children of less than five years of age. Professional Medical Journal 24(2), 322325.Google Scholar
Antai, D (2011) Controlling behavior, power relations within intimate relationships and intimate partner physical and sexual violence against women in Nigeria. BMC Public Health 11, 511.Google Scholar
Åsling-Monemi, K, Naved, RT and Persson, (2009) Violence against women and increases in the risk of diarrheal disease and respiratory tract infections in infancy: a prospective cohort study in Bangladesh. Archives of Pediatrics and Adolescent Medicine 163(10), 931936.Google Scholar
Bogat, GA, DeJonghe, E, Levendosky, AA, Davidson, WS and von Eye, A (2006) Trauma symptoms among infants exposed to intimate partner violence. Child Abuse and Neglect 30(2), 109125.Google Scholar
Breiman, RF, Cosmas, L, Njenga, MK, Williamson, J, Mott, JA and Katz, MA et al. (2015) Severe acute respiratory infection in children in a densely populated urban slum in Kenya, 2007–2011. BMC Infectious Diseases 15, 95.Google Scholar
Campbell, JC and Lewandowski, LA (1997) Mental and physical health effects of intimate partner violence on women and children. Psychiatric Clinics of North America 20(2), 353374.Google Scholar
Carpenter, GL and Stacks, AM (2009) Developmental effects of exposure to Intimate Partner Violence in early childhood: a review of the literature. Children and Youth Services Review 31, 831839.Google Scholar
Cronholm, PF, Fogarty, CT, Ambuel, B and Harrison, SL (2011) Intimate partner violence. American Family Physician 83(10), 11651172.Google Scholar
Devries, KM, Kishor, S, Johnson, H, Stöckl, H, Bacchus, LJ, Garcia-Moreno, C and Watts, C (2010) Intimate partner violence during pregnancy: analysis of prevalence data from 19 countries. Reproductive Health Matters 18(36), 158170.Google Scholar
Ellsberg, M, Jansen, HA, Heise, L, Watts, CH, Garcia-Moreno, C and WHO Multi-Country Study on Women’s Health and Domestic Violence against Women Study Team (2008) Intimate partner violence and women’s physical and mental health in the WHO multi-country study on women’s health and domestic violence: an observational study. Lancet 371(9619), 11651172.Google Scholar
Ezechi, OC, Kalu, BK, Ezechi, LO, Nwokoro, CA, Ndububa, VI and Okeke, GC (2004) Prevalence and pattern of domestic violence against pregnant Nigerian women. Journal of Obstetrics and Gynaecology 24(6), 652656.Google Scholar
García-Moreno, C, Pallitto, C, Devries, K, Stöckl, H, Watts, C and Abrahams, N (2013) Global and Regional Estimates of Violence Against Women: Prevalence and Health Effects of Intimate Partner Violence and Non-Partner Sexual Violence. World Health Organization, Geneva.Google Scholar
Gessner, BD (2011) Acute lower respiratory infection in the developing world. Expert Reviews in Respiratory Medicine 5(4), 459463.Google Scholar
Gibbs, A, Corboz, J and Jewkes, R (2018) Factors associated with recent intimate partner violence experience amongst currently married women in Afghanistan and health impacts of IPV: a cross sectional study. BMC Public Health 18(1), 593.Google Scholar
Gil-González, D, Vives-Cases, C, Ruiz, MT, Carrasco-Portiño, M and Álvarez-Dardet, C (2007) Childhood experiences of violence in perpetrators as a risk factor of intimate partner violence: a systematic review. Journal of Public Health 30(1), 1422.Google Scholar
Grant, CC, Wall, CR, Gibbons, MJ, Morton, SM, Santosham, M and Black, RE (2011) Child nutrition and lower respiratory tract disease burden in New Zealand: a global context for a national perspective. Journal of Paediatrics and Child Health 47(8), 497504.Google Scholar
Hossain, MA, Sumi, NS, Haque, ME and Bari, W (2014) Consequences of intimate partner violence against women on under-five child mortality in Bangladesh. Journal of Interpersonal Violence 29(8), 14021417.Google Scholar
Hungerford, A, Ogle, RL and Clements, CM (2010) Children’s exposure to intimate partner violence: relations between parent–child concordance and children’s adjustment. Violence and Victims 25(2), 185201.Google Scholar
Kernic, MA, Wolf, ME and Holt, VL (2000) Rates and relative risk of hospital admission among women in violent intimate partner relationships. American Journal of Public Health 90(9), 14161420.Google Scholar
Khan, NT, Begum, A, Chowdhury, TMJ, Das, BK, Shahid, F, Kabir, S and Begum, M (2017) Violence against women in Bangladesh. Delta Medical College Journal 5(1), 2529.Google Scholar
Levine, MB (1975) Interparental violence and its effects on the children: a study of 50 families in general practice. Medical Science Law 15, 172176.Google Scholar
Moore, JG (1975) Yo yo children: a study of 23 violence matrimonial reports. Child Welfare 8, 557566.Google Scholar
Nanda, P, Gautam, A, Verma, R, Khanna, A, Khan, N and Brahme, D et al. (2014) Study on Masculinity, Intimate Partner Violence and Son Preference in India. International Center for Research on Women, New Delhi.Google Scholar
National Population Commission and ICF Macro (2009) Nigeria Demographic and Health Survey 2008. National Population Commission (NPC), Abuja, Nigeria and ICF Macro.Google Scholar
NIPORT, Mitra and Associates and Macro International (2009) Bangladesh Demographic and Health Survey 2007. National Institute of Population Research and Training, Dhaka, Bangladesh, Mitra and Associates and Macro International, Calverton, MD, USA.Google Scholar
Olayanju, L, Naguib, RNG, Nguyen, QT, Bali, RK and Vung, ND (2013) Combating intimate partner violence in Africa: opportunities and challenges in five African countries. Aggression and Violent Behavior 18(1), 101112.Google Scholar
Rennison, CM and Welchans, S (2000) Intimate Partner Violence. NCJ 178247, Bureau of Justice Statistics, US Department of Justice, Washington, DC. URL: http://bjs.ojp.usdoj.gov/content/pub/pdf/ipv.pdfGoogle Scholar
Repetti, RL, Taylor, SE and Seeman, TE (2002) Risky families: family social environments and the mental and physical health of offspring. Psychological Bulletin 128(2), 330e366.Google Scholar
Rudan, I, Boschi-Pinto, C, Biloglav, Z, Mulholland, K and Campbell, H (2008) Epidemiology and etiology of childhood pneumonia. Bulletin of the World Health Organization 86(5), 408416.Google Scholar
Rudan, I, Tomaskovic, L, Boschi-Pinto, C and Campbell, H (2004) Global estimate of the incidence of clinical pneumonia among children under five years of age. Bulletin of the World Health Organization 82, 895903.Google Scholar
Shamu, S, Abrahams, N, Temmerman, M, Musekiwa, A and Zarowsky, C (2011) A systematic review of African studies on intimate partner violence against pregnant women: prevalence and risk factors. Intimate Partner Violence in Pregnancy in Africa 6(3), 19.Google Scholar
Sharps, P, Alhusen, JL, Bullock, L, Bhandari, S, Ghazarian, S, Udo, IE and Campbell, J (2013) Engaging and retaining abused women in perinatal home visitation programs. Pediatrics 132 (Supplement 2), S134S139.Google Scholar
Silverman, JG, Decker, MR, Gupta, J, Kapur, N, Raj, A and Naved, RT (2009) Maternal experiences of intimate partner violence and child morbidity in Bangladesh: evidence from a national Bangladeshi sample. Archives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine 163(8), 700705.Google Scholar
Silverman, JG, Gupta, J, Decker, MR, Kapur, N and Raj, A (2007) Intimate partner violence and unwanted pregnancy, miscarriage, induced abortion, and stillbirth among a national sample of Bangladeshi women. British Journal of Obstetrics & Gynecology 114(10), 12461252.Google Scholar
UN IGME (2017) Levels & Trends in Child Mortality: Report 2017. Estimates Developed by the UN Inter-agency Group for Child Mortality Estimation (UN IGME) United Nations Children’s Fund, New York.Google Scholar
World Health Organization (2012) Understanding and Addressing Violence Against Women: Intimate Partner Violence. World Health Organization, Geneva. URL: http://www.who.int/reproductivehealth/publications/violence/en/index.htmlGoogle Scholar
Ziaei, S, Naved, RT and Ekström, E-C (2014) Women’s exposure to intimate partner violence and child malnutrition: findings from demographic and health surveys in Bangladesh. Maternal and Child Nutrition 10, 347359.Google Scholar