Violence against women and children in Yemen: A mixed-methods systematic review

Samana Shreedhar, Sayali Arvind Chavan, Marwah Al-Zumair, Mirna Naccache, Priya Shreedhar, Lauren Maxwell
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Abstract

Violence against women and children (VAWC) is a significant health and human rights issue closely tied to multiple Sustainable Development Goals. While VAWC is prevalent in all countries, the severity and incidence of VAWC increase during wars, natural disasters, economic crises, and pandemics, all of which have affected Yemen in recent years. This systematic review synthesizes evidence from qualitative and quantitative studies on the types, prevalence, perpetrators of, and risk factors for VAWC in Yemen. Before initiating the search, the protocol and search strategy were registered to PROSPERO (CRD42021237855). We systematically searched four biomedical databases and grey literature sources and used reverse snowball sampling to identify eligible studies. The 31 studies included in the analysis depicted a range of forms of VAWC, encompassing honor violence, female genital mutilation and cutting, early and very early marriage, tourist marriage, family and intimate partner violence, and gender inequities in access to food, education, and medical care. Included studies reported a high prevalence of many forms of violence, including corporal punishment in schools and intimate partner violence. We reviewed study quality and how studies addressed ethical concerns in VAWC-related research. We found that several studies did not report ethics review or interviewer training and no studies discussed safety planning or addressing the mental health needs of participants in VAWC research. This systematic review provides a much-needed synthesis of existing research on VAWC in Yemen. Since the start of the 2014 war, Yemen has become the world's largest humanitarian crisis, with the highest rate of maternal mortality and gender inequality in the world. We only identified one study initiated after the recent war in Yemen. This deficiency represents a missed opportunity to understand how the ongoing war has reversed prior gains in reducing the prevalence of child and very early child marriage and introduced new forms of gender-based violence, including tourist marriage.
也门针对妇女和儿童的暴力行为:混合方法系统审查
暴力侵害妇女和儿童(VAWC)是一个重大的健康和人权问题,与多个可持续发展目标密切相关。尽管暴力侵害妇女和儿童行为在所有国家都很普遍,但在战争、自然灾害、经济危机和流行病期间,暴力侵害妇女和儿童行为的严重性和发生率都会增加,而近年来也门受到了所有这些因素的影响。本系统性综述综合了有关也门暴力侵害妇女行为的类型、发生率、施暴者和风险因素的定性和定量研究证据。在开始检索之前,我们在 PROSPERO(CRD42021237855)上注册了检索方案和检索策略。我们系统地检索了四个生物医学数据库和灰色文献来源,并采用反向滚雪球抽样法确定了符合条件的研究。纳入分析的 31 项研究描述了一系列形式的暴力侵害妇女和儿童行为,包括名誉暴力、切割女性生殖器官、早婚和超早婚、旅游婚姻、家庭和亲密伴侣暴力,以及在获得食物、教育和医疗保健方面的性别不平等。所纳入的研究报告了多种形式暴力的高发生率,包括学校体罚和亲密伴侣暴力。我们审查了研究质量以及研究如何解决与暴力侵害妇女和儿童相关研究中的伦理问题。我们发现,有几项研究没有报告伦理审查或访谈者培训情况,也没有研究讨论暴力侵害妇女和儿童研究中的安全规划或解决参与者的心理健康需求。本系统性综述对也门暴力侵害妇女行为的现有研究进行了归纳总结,这是亟需的。自 2014 年战争爆发以来,也门已成为世界上最大的人道主义危机国,其孕产妇死亡率和性别不平等问题居世界之首。我们只发现了一项在也门近期战争后启动的研究。这意味着我们错失了一次机会,无法了解持续不断的战争如何逆转了之前在降低童婚和早婚率方面取得的成果,并引入了新形式的性别暴力,包括旅游婚姻。
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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