Midwives' experiences working with women and girls surviving violence in Yemen: a qualitative study.

IF 2.3 Q2 OBSTETRICS & GYNECOLOGY
Frontiers in global women's health Pub Date : 2025-03-21 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.3389/fgwh.2025.1450053
Marwah Al-Zumair, Luz Marina Leegstra, Hussein Zaid, Raisa Ferrer Pizarro, Monia Al-Zumair, Lamya Bawahda, Albrecht Jahn, Lauren Maxwell
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Background: Yemeni women and girls have long endured pervasive violence, a situation further exacerbated by the ongoing humanitarian crisis. Violence against women and girls (VAWG) is strongly stigmatized in the Yemeni context. In under-resourced, rural settings like Yemen, where gender inequities prevent women and girls from accessing the formal health system, community midwives may be an important resource for women and girls who experience interpersonal violence. This study explored community midwives' knowledge, training, and applied experience working with women and girls who experience interpersonal violence.

Methods: We conducted 20 in-depth interviews with community midwives in four Yemeni governorates. A female Yemeni physician and qualitative researcher trained in the ethical conduct of VAWG-related research conducted interviews using a semi-structured interview guide. Participants gave verbal consent for participation in the one-time interview. We used thematic analysis to summarise the findings. Interviews were transcribed in Arabic and English, and differences in interpretation were resolved through consensus.

Results: While midwives had limited formal training in supporting women and girls who experience interpersonal violence, they play a critical role in responding to VAWG in Yemen. Community midwives provide psychological support, contraception, violence-related health care, and referrals to more advanced healthcare and protection services, including women-friendly spaces (WFSs) and shelters. Lack of training and treatment guidelines, in addition to a lack of supportive services and VAWG-related stigma, were important barriers for midwives working with VAWG. The stigma associated with sexual violence discouraged women from seeking health care or accessing limited protection services.

Conclusion: Community midwives in Yemen are well-placed to support women and girls who experience violence. Midwives should receive context-appropriate training and support to work with women and girls who experience violence. The lack of available services and the stigma associated with experiencing, reporting and supporting VAWG survivors must be carefully considered before designing any intervention.

助产士在也门帮助幸存暴力的妇女和女孩的经验:一项定性研究。
背景:也门妇女和女童长期遭受普遍的暴力,持续的人道主义危机进一步加剧了这种情况。在也门,暴力侵害妇女和女童行为受到强烈谴责。在也门等资源不足的农村环境中,性别不平等使妇女和女孩无法获得正规卫生系统的服务,社区助产士可能是遭受人际暴力的妇女和女孩的重要资源。本研究探讨了社区助产士的知识、培训以及与遭受人际暴力的妇女和女孩一起工作的应用经验。方法:我们对也门四个省的社区助产士进行了20次深度访谈。一名也门女医生和接受过vawg相关研究道德行为培训的定性研究员使用半结构化访谈指南进行了访谈。参与者口头同意参加一次性访谈。我们使用专题分析来总结研究结果。采访以阿拉伯文和英文记录,口译方面的分歧通过协商一致解决。结果:虽然助产士在支持遭受人际暴力的妇女和女孩方面接受过有限的正式培训,但她们在应对也门的暴力侵害妇女行为方面发挥了关键作用。社区助产士提供心理支持、避孕、与暴力有关的保健服务,以及转介到更先进的保健和保护服务,包括妇女友好空间和庇护所。缺乏培训和治疗指南,再加上缺乏支持性服务和与VAWG相关的耻辱,是助产士从事VAWG工作的重要障碍。与性暴力有关的耻辱使妇女不愿寻求保健或获得有限的保护服务。结论:也门的社区助产士在为遭受暴力的妇女和女孩提供支持方面处于有利地位。助产士应接受适合具体情况的培训和支持,以便与遭受暴力的妇女和女孩一起工作。在设计任何干预措施之前,必须仔细考虑可用服务的缺乏以及与经历、报告和支持暴力侵害妇女行为幸存者相关的耻辱。
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
3.70
自引率
0.00%
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审稿时长
13 weeks
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