The Prevalence of Sexually Transmitted Infections and Subsequent Association with Exposure to Childhood Violence and Mental Health Outcomes for Adolescents and Young Adults in Zimbabwe

Edson Chipalo, Ikenna Obasi Odii, Aaron Faro Mvula, Simon Mwima, Lameck Kapupa
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Abstract

Sexually transmitted infections (STIs) represent a major public health concern for young people in developing nations, impacting approximately two-thirds of individuals below the age of 25. This study examined the prevalence and the association between self-reported STIs, childhood violence exposure, and mental health outcomes among adolescents and young adults (13-24 years old) in Zimbabwe. Secondary data from the 2017 Zimbabwe Violence Against Children and Youth Survey (n=8,715) was utilized. Data analysis was performed using chisquare to determine the prevalence estimates for bivariate. Seven logistic regression models were used to examine the significant association between independent variables and outcomes for multivariate. About 45.5% of adolescents and young adults with self-reported STIs were exposed to multiple forms of childhood violence, 49.8% reported lifetime suicide risk, and 44.9% reported moderate-to-severe mental distress in the past 30 days. Furthermore, logistic regression results indicated that adolescents and young adults with self-reported STI diagnoses were more likely to be exposed to multiple forms of childhood violence, including physical, emotional, and sexual violence, as well as mental distress in the past 30 days and lifetime suicide risk compared to those without STIs. Therefore, this study underscores the importance of implementing comprehensive public health strategies to protect the wellbeing of adolescents and young adults with STIs. Interventions should also prioritize raising awareness, destigmatizing STIs, implementing and strengthening violence prevention policies, and addressing mental health problems through community mental health treatment programs in Zimbabwe. Keywords: Childhood violence, Emotional violence, Exposure, Mental distress, Physical violence, Sexual violence, Sexually transmitted infections (STIs), Suicide risk, Zimbabwe.
津巴布韦青少年性传播感染流行率及其与童年暴力事件和心理健康结果的关系
性传播感染(STIs)是发展中国家年轻人的主要公共卫生问题,约有三分之二的 25 岁以下年轻人受到影响。本研究考察了津巴布韦青少年和年轻成年人(13-24 岁)中自我报告的性传播感染、童年暴力暴露和心理健康结果之间的流行率和关联。研究利用了2017年津巴布韦暴力侵害儿童和青少年调查(n=8715)的二手数据。数据分析采用秩方(chisquare)来确定二元变量的流行率估计值。在多变量分析中,使用七个逻辑回归模型来检验自变量与结果之间的显著关联。在自我报告患有性传播感染的青少年中,约有 45.5%的人曾遭受多种形式的儿童暴力,49.8%的人报告有终生自杀风险,44.9%的人报告在过去 30 天内有中度至重度精神痛苦。此外,逻辑回归结果表明,与没有性传播感染的青少年相比,自我报告患有性传播感染的青少年更有可能遭受多种形式的童年暴力,包括身体暴力、情感暴力和性暴力,以及过去 30 天内的精神痛苦和终生自杀风险。因此,本研究强调了实施全面的公共卫生策略以保护患有性传播疾病的青少年和年轻成人的健康的重要性。在津巴布韦,干预措施还应优先考虑提高认识、消除对性传播感染的污名化、实施并加强暴力预防政策,以及通过社区心理健康治疗项目解决心理健康问题。关键词儿童暴力 情感暴力 暴露 精神痛苦 身体暴力 性暴力 性传播感染 自杀风险 津巴布韦
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