A qualitative investigation of gender-based violence prevention and response using digital technologies in low resource settings and refugee populations.

IF 4.2 2区 医学 Q1 PSYCHIATRY
Luissa Vahedi, Lindsay Stark, Rachel Ding, Caroline Masboungi, Dorcas Erskine, Catherine Poulton, Ilana Seff
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Governmental and non-governmental organizations across medical, legal, and psychosocial sectors providing care to survivors of gender-based violence (GBV) and their families rapidly digitalized services during the COVID-19 pandemic. GBV prevention/response services working with women and children who are forcibly displaced and/or living in low-and-middle income countries (LMIC) were no exception to the rapid digitalization trend. Literature is lacking a critical synthesis of best practices and lessons learned since digitalization replaced major operations involved in GBV prevention/response.Objective: This research qualitatively investigated how GBV service providers, located in a range of socio-political settings, navigated the process of digitalizing GBV prevention/response during the COVID-19 crisis.Method: Semi-structured key informant interviews (KII) with GBV service providers in varied sectors were implemented virtually (2020-2021) in Brazil, Guatemala, Iraq, and Italy (regarding forcibly displaced women/girls for the latter). Participants were recruited using purposive and snowball sampling. Interview guides covered a range of topics: perceived changes in violence and service provision, experiences with virtual services, system coordination, and challenges. The KIIs were conducted in Portuguese, Spanish, Arabic, and Italian. Interviews were audio-recorded, transcribed, and translated into English. The research team conducted thematic analysis within and between countries using a structured codebook of data driven and theory driven codes.Results: Major themes concerned the: (1) spectrum of services that were digitalized during the COVID-19 crisis; (2) gender digital divide as a barrier to equitable, safe, and effective service digitalization; (3) digital violence as an unintended consequence of increased digitalization across social/public services.Conclusion: Digitalization is a balancing act with respect to (1) the variety of remotely-delivered services that are possible and (2) the access/safety considerations related to the gender digital divide and digital violence.

在低资源环境和难民人口中使用数字技术预防和应对性别暴力的定性调查。
背景:在 COVID-19 大流行期间,为性别暴力 (GBV) 幸存者及其家人提供护理的医疗、法律和心理社会部门的政府和非政府组织迅速实现了服务数字化。为被迫流离失所和/或生活在中低收入国家(LMIC)的妇女和儿童提供的性别暴力预防/响应服务也不例外地出现了快速数字化的趋势。自数字化取代性别暴力预防/响应的主要业务以来,文献中缺乏对最佳实践和经验教训的重要综述:本研究定性调查了在 COVID-19 危机期间,处于不同社会政治环境中的性别暴力服务提供者是如何引导性别暴力预防/响应数字化进程的:在巴西、危地马拉、伊拉克和意大利(后者涉及被迫流离失所的妇女/女童),对不同部门的性别暴力服务提供者进行了半结构化关键信息提供者访谈(KII)。通过有目的的抽样和滚雪球抽样招募参与者。访谈指南涵盖了一系列主题:对暴力和服务提供变化的看法、虚拟服务的经验、系统协调和挑战。KII 访谈以葡萄牙语、西班牙语、阿拉伯语和意大利语进行。对访谈进行了录音、转录并翻译成英文。研究小组使用数据驱动和理论驱动的结构化编码手册,在国家内部和国家之间进行了主题分析:主要专题涉及(1) COVID-19 危机期间数字化服务的范围;(2) 性别数字鸿沟是实现公平、安全和有效服务数字化的障碍;(3) 数字暴力是社会/公共服务领域数字化增加的意外后果:结论:数字化是一种平衡行为,涉及(1)各种可能的远程交付服务,以及(2)与性别数字鸿沟和数字暴力有关的访问/安全考虑。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
7.60
自引率
12.00%
发文量
153
审稿时长
18 weeks
期刊介绍: The European Journal of Psychotraumatology (EJPT) is a peer-reviewed open access interdisciplinary journal owned by the European Society of Traumatic Stress Studies (ESTSS). The European Journal of Psychotraumatology (EJPT) aims to engage scholars, clinicians and researchers in the vital issues of how to understand, prevent and treat the consequences of stress and trauma, including but not limited to, posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), depressive disorders, substance abuse, burnout, and neurobiological or physical consequences, using the latest research or clinical experience in these areas. The journal shares ESTSS’ mission to advance and disseminate scientific knowledge about traumatic stress. Papers may address individual events, repeated or chronic (complex) trauma, large scale disasters, or violence. Being open access, the European Journal of Psychotraumatology is also evidence of ESTSS’ stand on free accessibility of research publications to a wider community via the web. The European Journal of Psychotraumatology seeks to attract contributions from academics and practitioners from diverse professional backgrounds, including, but not restricted to, those in mental health, social sciences, and health and welfare services. Contributions from outside Europe are welcome. The journal welcomes original basic and clinical research articles that consolidate and expand the theoretical and professional basis of the field of traumatic stress; Review articles including meta-analyses; short communications presenting new ideas or early-stage promising research; study protocols that describe proposed or ongoing research; case reports examining a single individual or event in a real‑life context; clinical practice papers sharing experience from the clinic; letters to the Editor debating articles already published in the Journal; inaugural Lectures; conference abstracts and book reviews. Both quantitative and qualitative research is welcome.
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