OBJECTIVE:To analyze the results from the "WHO Multi-country Study on Women's Health and Domestic Violence", on the prevalence of intimate partner violence against women found in Brazil. METHODS:This cross-sectional study was part of the "WHO Multi-country Study on Women's Health and Domestic Violence against women", which was carried out in ten countries between 2000 and 2003. All the countries used a standardized structured questionnaire, devised for this study. In order to obtain data from contrasting settings within each country, the biggest city and a rural region were investigated whenever feasible. A representative sample of women aged 15 to 49 years was selected from the city of São Paulo and 15 municipalities in a rural region of the northeast, the Zona da Mata de Pernambuco. The study included 940 women from São Paulo and 1,188 from Zona da Mata de Pernambuco who had had an intimate partner at some time in their lives. Violence was classifi ed as psychological, physical and sexual types, and was analyzed in relation to overlapping, recurrence of episodes, severity and when it occurred. RESULTS:The women in São Paulo and Pernambuco respectively reported the following at least once in their lifetimes: psychological (N=383; 41.8% and N=580; 48.9%); physical (N=266; 27.2% and N=401; 33.7%); sexual (N=95; 10.1% and N=170; 14.3%) violence. There was signifi cant overlapping among the types of violence, which seemed to be associated with the most severe types of violence. The greatest single type was psychological violence, in São Paulo and Pernambuco (N=164; 17.5% and N=206; 17.3%), and the smallest was sexual violence (N=2; 0.2% and N=12; 1.0%). CONCLUSIONS:The results show that violence is a very common phenomenon. The fi ndings reiterate previous international studies results with regard to high magnitude and overlapping of types of intimate partner violence.KEY WORDS: Battered women. Violence against women. Spouse abuse. Domestic violence. Cross-sectional studies.
Descritores ResumoObjetivo É escasso o conhecimento sobre a ocorrência de violência contra a mulher no contexto brasileiro. A questão raramente aparece nos diagnósticos e nas condutas realizados nos serviços de saúde, apesar da magnitude e das importantes repercussões dessa forma de violência nas condições de saúde da população. Buscou-se encontrar casos de violência contra a mulher, identificando a natureza do ato perpetrado, a qualidade/ gravidade da violência e a relação do(a) agressor(a) com a mulher. Métodos O estudo foi realizado no Município de São Paulo, entre usuárias de uma unidade básica de saúde, durante dois meses, em 1998. A busca ativa de casos de violência e sua freqüência foi realizada mediante entrevista padronizada, aplicada a todas as mulheres de 15 a 49 anos que foram atendidas no período da pesquisa. Foram entrevistadas 322 mulheres. Resultados Ao todo, 143 usuárias (44,4%; IC95%=38,9-49,8%) relataram pelo menos um episódio de violência física na vida adulta, sendo que, em 110 casos, o ato de violência partiu de companheiros ou familiares (34,1%; IC95%=28,9-39,3%). Relataram a ocorrência de pelo menos um episódio de violência sexual na vida adulta 37 mulheres (11,5%; IC95%=8,0-14,9%); em 23 casos, os autores da ação eram companheiros ou familiares (7,1%; IC95%=4,3-9,9%). Conclusões Assim como já demonstrado em outros países, a violência física e sexual teve alta magnitude entre as mulheres usuárias dos serviços básicos de saúde. Os companheiros e familiares são os principais perpetradores, e os casos são, em sua maioria, severos e repetitivos. Abstract ObjectivesThere is scarce information on violence against women in the Brazilian society. This fact is rarely reported in medical records as part of the diagnosis and case management, despite evidence showing the significant impact of violence on the population's health. The study aim was to estimate the occurrence of violence against
OBJECTIVE:To estimate the prevalence of physical and/or sexual violence by intimate partners and factors associated with this, in different sociocultural contexts. METHODS:This cross-sectional study was part of the "WHO Multi-country Study on Women's Health and Domestic Violence against Women". It consisted of representative samples of women from the municipality of São Paulo (Southeastern Brazil) and from the Zona da Mata of Pernambuco (Northeastern Brazil), this latter is a region with more traditional gender norms. Interviews were conducted in the homes of 940 women in São Paulo and 1,188 in the Zona da Mata, in the years 2000-1. The women were aged 15 to 49 years and had all had at least one intimate partnership with a man during their lifetimes. Three sets of factors were constructed, corresponding to hierarchically organized categories: sociodemographic, family and female autonomy/submission characteristics. Hierarchical logistic regression was used to analyze factors associated with intimate partner violence at each location. RESULTS:A prevalence of 28.9% was found in Sao Paulo (95% CI 26.0;31.8) and 36.9% (95% CI 34.1;39.6) in Zona da Mata. Up to eight years of schooling, conjugal physical violence between the women's parents, sexual abuse during childhood, fi ve or more pregnancies and drinking problems were associated with intimate partner violence at both locations. Financial autonomy for the woman, informal partnership, age and consent to the fi rst sexual intercourse were associated with higher rates only in Zona da Mata. The socioeconomic characteristics that presented associations in the fi rst category were mediated by other factors in the fi nal model. CONCLUSIONS:The fi ndings show the relativization of socioeconomic factors in relation to other factors, particularly those representing gender attributes. Sociocultural differences were found between the two locations, and these were refl ected in the associated factors.
Several studies have indicated that the prevailing high incidence and mortality rates of cervical cancer, mainly in developing countries, are due to the low quality and coverage of the cervical smear or Papanicolaou (Pap) test. This article intends to analise some aspects related to measures of control and prevention of cervical cancer, such as the effectiveness of the Pap test, the operational and scientific rationale of public health policies for the prevention of cervical cancer and coverage of the Papanicolaou test in many countries. It also intends to review the explanatory models that have been proposed to analyze access to this service. For this latter objective, we investigated the factors associated to the use of the Pap test described within the epidemiological literature and we proposed a new approach in the investigation of these factors, incorporating social, cultural and organizational aspects in the analysis of access to and use of this practice so that measures of prevention and control may be more coherent with the needs and the rights of women.
Links between HIV/AIDS care and reproductive health, including fertility options for people living with HIV (PLWH), have not been sufficiently addressed by health care providers. Moreover, few studies have addressed men in this regard. To describe attitudes toward parenthood and identify factors associated with desire to have children among men and women living with HIV a cross-sectional study involving a sample of 533 women and 206 men (bisexual and heterosexual) attending two reference sexually transmitted disease (STD)/AIDS centers in São Paulo, Brazil. Participants answered a standardized questionnaire. Desire to have children as the study outcome was compared between men and women and associated factors searched for in multivariable regression analysis. In contrast to previous studies conducted in developed countries, desire to have children in this sample was more frequent among men than among women and it was reported by 27.9% of participants (50.1% of men versus 19.2% of women). Women were more likely to anticipate doctors' strong opposition to PLWH getting pregnant and men reported lower information level about HIV/mother-to-child transmission (MTCT). Bisexual men were more likely to desire to have biologic children. Male gender, younger age, having no children, living with 1-2 children, and being in a heterosexual partnership were independently associated with desire to have children. Regardless of gender, the childless as well as the youngest should be regarded as groups to be particularly targeted by counseling, to be provided with objective information about reproductive rights and options. Further research is warranted to address the desire for children among strictly homosexual men.
OBJETIVO: Analisar a associação entre a violência por parceiro íntimo contra mulheres e a infecção ou suspeita de infecção pelo vírus da imunodeficiência humana (HIV). MÉTODOS: Estudo transversal com base em dados de questionários aplicados face-a-face e de prontuários médicos de 2.780 mulheres de 15 a 49 anos, atendidas em unidades do sistema único de saúde da Grande São Paulo, SP, em 2001-2002. As mulheres foram categorizadas em: usuárias em tratamento por serem "soropositivas para o HIV", com "suspeita de HIV" e aquelas que procuraram os serviços por outros motivos. A violência por parceiro íntimo contra mulheres na vida foi categorizada por gravidade e recorrência dos episódios de violência. A associação com o desfecho foi testada pelo modelo de Poisson com variância robusta e ajustada por variáveis sociodemográficas, sexuais e reprodutivas. RESULTADOS: A prevalência de violência foi de 59,8%. Sofrer violência reiterada e grave apresentou maior associação de infecção confirmada pelo HIV (RP = 1,91). A violência independente da gravidade e da recorrência dos episódios apresentou maior associação para a suspeita de infecção por HIV (RP = 1,29). CONCLUSÕES: A violência por parceiro íntimo contra mulheres tem papel relevante nas situações de suspeita e confirmação da infecção pelo HIV, sendo essencial incluir sua detecção, controle e prevenção como parte da atenção integral à saúde das mulheres.
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