| Literature DB >> 19284879 |
Birthe Steiner1, Marie T Benner, Egbert Sondorp, K Peter Schmitz, Ursula Mesmer, Sandrine Rosenberger.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite international acknowledgement of the linkages between sexual violence and conflict, reliable data on its prevalence, the circumstances, characteristics of perpetrators, and physical or mental health impacts is rare. Among the conflicts that have been associated with widespread sexual violence has been the one in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC).Entities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19284879 PMCID: PMC2667421 DOI: 10.1186/1752-1505-3-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Confl Health ISSN: 1752-1505 Impact factor: 2.723
General information on Malteser International rape survivors' programme in South Kivu, DRC
| • Total population of South Kivu, DRC 963,000 (2006 est.) |
| • Population with access to VAS-centres: approx. 202,600 (2006 est.) |
| • Approx. 100 health centres located in 9 health zones |
| • located in one of 5 health zones: (Walungu, Kaziba, Mumumbano, Kaniola, Mwana) |
| • 18 Community Based Organizations (CBO's) provide psycho-social care |
| • Programme started in 2003 when during a period of intense fighting in South Kivu over 1,000 women were registered with sexually transmitted infections resulting from rape |
| • About 20,517 cases of rape (registered January 2005–December 2007) |
Figure 1Location of VAS-centres in South Kivu, DRC.
Medical services offered to rape survivors through Malteser
| • Medical care and psycho-social assistance |
| • Integrated into local health structures |
| • Medical treatment at specialized health centres (VAS-centres) |
| • Psycho-social counselling through 18 local CBOs |
| (community-based organizations); about 10 local staff each |
| • Curriculum: 2 day-teachings in psycho-social assistance/ |
| basic medical knowledge, monthly supervisions |
| • Malteser pays running costs and staff salaries |
| • Salary per staff: 35 USD/month plus variable additional payment based on performance (97 – 145 USD/month) |
| • Awareness-raising about sexual violence through Provincial Health Inspection with special focus on combatants |
Characteristics of Malteser VAS- programme
| • Presumptive treatment for STIs within 2 weeks after incident, otherwise symptom-oriented |
| • PEP (post-exposure prophylaxis) within 72 hours (in 4 VAS-centres) |
| • HIV counselling |
| • Anti-retroviral treatment in cooperation with MSF (only in Bukavu) |
| • Pregnancy tests, special programme for women with rape-related pregnancies |
| • referral system for advanced medical treatment (e.g.: operations) |
Programme findings
| Number of identified survivors | 9,109 | 6338 | 8541 | only rape (penetrative sexual assault) |
| STI treatment | 5,987 (66%) | 38% | ||
| HIV test | 133 (1,5%) | 58% | 57% | |
| Referral to secondary hospitals | 242 (3%) | Advanced medical treatment, e.g. drug-resistant STI | ||
| Referral to hospital Panzi (Bukavu) | 29 (0,3%) | Advanced surgical treatment, e.g. fistula repair | ||
| Time between rape and Malteser registration | Reasons: Fear, stigmatisation, shame; kidnappings | |||
| 72 h | 3,2% | 151 (2,4%) | 47 (0,6%) | |
| < 1 month | 7,8% | |||
| < 1 year | 59,0% | |||
| Psycho-social treatment | 4099 (45%) | 5440 (86%) | 7536 (88%) | Home mediation visits, individual and group counselling |
| Rejection by family/social exclusion | 506 (12,4%) | approx. 6% | 208 (2,4%) | |
| Reintegration into families | 310 (61%) | approx. 65% | 37% | |
| Costs | 215,000€ (23 €/case) | Additionally: Prevention & Advocacy |
Number of Malteser-registered rape survivors (2005–2007) in the 5 health zones by year, South Kivu, DRC
| Walungu | Kaniola | Mubumbano | Kaziba | Mwana | ||
| Identified rape survivors | 996 | 3,252 | 978 | 639 | 3,244 | |
| Identified rape survivors | 1,180 | 2,208 | 876 | 708 | 1,366 | |
| Identified rape survivors | 1,134 | 1,863 | 755 | 267 | 1,051 |
Figure 2Time between rape and medical attendance, October-December 2005.
Figure 3Age distribution among rape survivors.
Rape survivors rejected by families and successfully reintegrated by area (2005)
| Walungu | 1118 | 52 (5%) | 30 (58%) |
| Kaziba | 395 | 93 (23%) | 50 (54%) |
| Mumumbano | 786 | 74 (9%) | 46 (62%) |
| Kaniola | 517 | 141 (27%) | 75 (53%) |
| Mwana | 1258 | 146 (12%) | 109 (75%) |