| Literature DB >> 27084116 |
Tanya Abramsky1, Karen M Devries2, Lori Michau3, Janet Nakuti3, Tina Musuya4, Ligia Kiss2, Nambusi Kyegombe2, Charlotte Watts2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Intimate partner violence (IPV) against women is a global public health concern. While community-level gender norms and attitudes to IPV are recognised drivers of IPV risk, there is little evidence on how interventions might tackle these drivers to prevent IPV at the community-level. This secondary analysis of data from the SASA! study explores the pathways through which SASA!, a community mobilisation intervention to prevent violence against women, achieved community-wide reductions in physical IPV.Entities:
Keywords: Community mobilisation; East Africa; Gender based violence; Impact evaluation; Intimate partner violence; Pathways analysis; Uganda; Violence prevention
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27084116 PMCID: PMC4833941 DOI: 10.1186/s12889-016-3018-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Public Health ISSN: 1471-2458 Impact factor: 3.295
Fig. 14 phases of SASA!
Fig. 2Conceptual framework – pathways to reduced IPV risk
Measures of IPV and potential community-, relationship- and individual-level mediators of intervention effect on IPV
| Concept being measured | Indicator | Items in composite index |
|---|---|---|
| IPV OUTCOMES (among women/men who have had a regular/casual partner in the past year) | ||
| Women’s experience of IPV | Women’s past year experience of physical IPV | Reports that her partner/most recent partner has done at least one of the following things to her in the past year: |
| Men’s perpetration of IPV | Men’s past year perpetration of IPV | Fills in anonymous card that ‘yes’ he has ‘used violence on your (partner) [most recent partner] in the last 12 months (last 12 months of your most recent relationship).’ a |
| MEDIATORS | ||
| Community-level mediators (EA-level** aggregate prevalence) | ||
| Community responses to prevent violence | Okay for others in community to intervene if they know IPV is occurring | Among all respondents in EA, percentage who answers ‘yes’ to the question: ‘If a husband beats up his wife, should others outside the couple intervene?’ |
| People who have witnessed/heard violence who have responded appropriately (among those who have seen or heard IPV in their community) | Among respondents in EA who had seen or heard IPV happening in their community, percentage who reported that: | |
| Norms around violence | Acceptable for a man to use violence against his partner | Among all respondents in EA, percentage who answer that ‘yes’, a man has good reason to hit his wife in at least one of the following scenarios: |
| Norms around women’s control over sex | Acceptable for a woman to refuse sex with her partner | Among all respondents in EA, percentage who answer that ‘yes’ in their opinion it is acceptable if a married woman refuses to have sex with her husband if she doesn’t feel like it. |
| Okay for a woman to ask her husband to use a condom | Among all respondents in EA, percentage who answer that ‘yes’ it is acceptable for a married woman to ask her husband to use a condom. | |
| Broader gender norms | Others in community would respect a man who made decisions jointly with his wife | Among all respondents in EA, percentage who answer that ‘yes’, if a husband told his friends that he makes decisions jointly with his wife, his friends would respect him. |
| Man’s role to decide if his wife can work | Among all respondents in EA, percentage who answer that ‘yes’ they think it is a husband’s role to decide whether or not his wife can work outside the home. | |
| Relationship level mediators (for those partnered in past year) | ||
| Communication | Discuss things that happen in day | Answers ‘yes’ in the last 12 months they and their partner discuss things that happen to the respondent during the day, AND things that happen to their partner during the day. |
| Discuss worries | Answers ‘yes’ in the last 12 months they and their partner discuss the respondent’s worried or feelings. | |
| Discuss what you both like during sex | Answers ‘yes’ that over the last 12 months they have openly asked their partner about what he/she likes during sex, AND that they have openly told their partner about what they themselves like during sex. | |
| Appreciate work partner does around house (where applicable) | Answers ‘many times’ (versus ‘none’ or ‘a few’) to the question of how many times they have shown appreciation for the work their partner does inside the home. | |
| Appreciate work partner does outside house (where applicable) | Answers ‘many times’ (versus ‘none’ or ‘a few’) to the question of how many times they have shown appreciation for the work their partner does outside the home. | |
| Power dynamics | Joint decision making | Answers that ‘most of the time’ or ‘all of the time’ in the last 12 months they have made decisions jointly with their partner on important issues, such as where they stay/live or what school the children attend |
| Man helps around house (among cohabiting couples) | Answers that ‘yes’ in the last 12 months the male partner/male respondent has regularly helped with any of the housework. | |
| Woman refused a job because husband doesn’t want her to work | Answer that ‘yes’ in the last 12 months the female respondent/female partner has given up or refused a job for money outside the home because her partner did not want her to work. | |
| Woman participated in deciding how household finances spent (among cohabiting couples) | Female respondent answers that ‘yes’ in the last 12 months she has participated in deciding how the family finances were spent. | |
| Additional sex partners | Concurrent partners (among non-polygamous partnered respondents) | Answers that ‘yes’ they have had a sexual relationship with any other person in the last 12 months while being with their partner. |
| Male partner often suspicious that female partner is unfaithful | Reports that ‘yes’ in the last 12 months the male partner/male respondent has often been suspicious that the female respondent/female partner is unfaithful. | |
| Relationship dissolution | Separated/divorced in past year (among those who have been married, lived together with someone as if married, or had a regular partner at some point in the last 12 months) | Among those who have been married or in a relationship at some point in the past year, those who report being currently ‘separated’, ‘divorced’ or ‘single’. |
| Individuals (for all respondents, separately for men and women) | ||
| Attitudes around violence | Acceptable for a man to use violence against his partner | Answers ‘yes’, a man has good reason to hit his wife in at least one of the following scenarios: |
| Okay for a woman to tell others if she is experiencing violence | Answers that ‘yes’, if a married woman has been beaten up by her husband, it is okay for her to tell others. | |
| Attitudes towards women’s control over sex | Acceptable for a woman to refuse sex with her partner | Answers that ‘yes’ in their opinion it is acceptable if a married woman refuses to have sex with her husband if she doesn’t feel like it. |
| Okay for a woman to ask her husband to use a condom | Answers that ‘yes’ it is acceptable for a married woman to ask her husband to use a condom. | |
| Broader gender attitudes | Others in community would respect a man who made decisions jointly with his wife | Answers that ‘yes’, if a husband told his friends that he makes decisions jointly with his wife, his friends would respect him. |
| Man’s role to decide if his wife can work | Answers that ‘yes’ they think it is a husband’s role to decide whether or not his wife can work outside the home. | |
| Behaviours | Drunk at least once a month | Answers that in the last 12 months they have been drunk ‘most days’, ‘weekly’ or ‘once a month’ (versus ‘never’ or ‘less than once a month’) |
| Woman experiencing (man perpetrating) violence who has told someone (among those experiencing/perpetrating IPV) | Among respondents who report IPV experience (women)/perpetration (men), those who report that ‘yes’ they have told someone about any of their experiences. | |
a Male disclosure of IPV perpetration in the main questionnaire was extremely low, especially in intervention communities. Therefore, for the purpose of this analysis, when looking at pathways to reduced male perpetration, we have instead used violence data from cards that respondents were asked to fill out anonymously and place in a sealed envelope at the end of the interview
**EA = census enumeration area
Estimates of effect on IPV, comparing outcome in intervention versus control communities
| Baseline | Follow-up | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IPV outcome indicators | Intervention | Control | Intervention | Control | aRRa (95 % CI) |
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| Women’s past year experience of physical IPV (among those partnered in past year) | 75/302 (25 %) | 57/273 (21 %) | 46/504 (9 %) | 93/424 (22 %) | 0.48 (0.16 to 1.39) |
| Men’s past year perpetration of IPV (among those partnered in past year) | 95/309 (31 %) | 101/326 (31 %) | 123/617 (20 %) | 256/523 (49 %) | 0.39 (0.20–0.73) |
aRisk ratios calculated at the cluster-level, adjusted for community-pair, and weighted according to the number of observations per village. Adjusted risk ratios generated on the basis of expected number of events from a logistic regression model on individual data with independent variables including age, marital status and EA-level summary baseline measure of IPV
Estimates of intervention effect on potential mediators among women, comparing outcome in intervention versus control communities
| Baselinea | Follow-up | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intervention | Control | Intervention | Control | aRRb (95 % CI) | |
| COMMUNITY LEVELc |
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| Okay for others in community to intervene if they know IPV is occurring | - | - | 79.2 (7.1) | 58.7 (6.5) | 20.3 (10.2–30.4) |
| People who have witnessed/heard violence who have responded appropriately | - | - | 47.2 (16.3) | 29.8 (13.6) | 13.0 (−14.6–40.6) |
|
| |||||
| Acceptable for a man to use violence against his partner | 57.0 (15.3) | 59.1 (15.5) | 28.1 (6.7) | 51.1 (12.6) | −26.7 (−49.6– −3.7) |
|
| |||||
| Acceptable for a woman to refuse sex with her partner | 40.4 (14.7) | 35.3 (15.1) | 91.3 (3.2) | 74.7 (10.3) | 18.4 (6.0–30.9) |
| Okay for a woman to ask her husband to use a condom | - | - | 78.5 (3.2) | 59.2 (7.3) | 20.4 (13.5–27.4) |
|
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| Others in community would respect a man who made decisions jointly with his wife | - | - | 75.2 (0.5) | 57.2 (16.6) | 22.8 (−2.7–48.3) |
| Man’s role to decide if his wife can work | - | - | 39.3 (2.3) | 58.6 (9.9) | −21.9 (−36.9– −7.0) |
| RELATIONSHIP LEVEL (PARTNERED IN PAST YEAR) |
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| Discuss things that happen in day | 243/605 (80 %) | 232/274 (85 %) | 402/482 (83 %) | 269/398 (68 %) | 1.23 (1.01–1.48) |
| Discuss worries | 255/305 (84 %) | 231/274 (84 %) | 433/482 (90 %) | 295/398 (74 %) | 1.21 (1.02–1.44) |
| Discuss what you both like during sex | - | - | 321/481 (67 %) | 183/398 (46 %) | 1.49 (0.91–2.43) |
| Appreciate work partner does around house | - | - | 269 /397 (68 %) | 155/303 (51 %) | 1.27 (1.08–1.50) |
| Appreciate work partner does outside house | - | - | 346/410 (86 %) | 244/308 (79 %) | 1.08 (0.97–1.19) |
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| Joint decision making | 219/266 (82 %) | 205/246 (83 %) | 279/421 (66 %) | 154/332 (46 %) | 1.42 (1.14–1.76) |
| Man helps around house | 156/292 (53 %) | 159/272 (58 %) | 285/392 (73 %) | 164/299 (55 %) | 1.33 (0.94–1.88) |
| Woman refused a job because husband doesn’t want her to work | 76/300 (25 %) | 52/273 (19 %) | 54/454 (12 %) | 65/376 (17 %) | 0.78 (0.15–4.10) |
| Woman participated in deciding how household finances spent | 216/297 (73 %)* | 169/272 (62 %)* | 321/406 (79 %) | 217/313 (69 %) | 1.12 (1.01–1.24) |
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| Concurrent partners | 18/247 (7 %) | 8/215 (4 %) | 25/429 (6 %) | 20/341 (6 %) | 1.25 (0.37–4.22) |
| Male partner often suspicious that female partner is unfaithful | - | - | 68/504 (13 %) | 98/425 (23 %) | 0.65 (0.24–1.73) |
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| Separated/divorced in past year | 8/299 (3 %) | 3/264 (1 %) | 9/486 (2 %) | 17/401 (4 %) | 0.44 (0.08–2.52) |
| INDIVIDUALS (PARTNERED IN PAST YEAR) | |||||
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| Acceptable for a man to use violence against his partner | 181/304 (60 %) | 166/274 (61 %) | 168/504 (33 %) | 260/426 (61 %) | 0.56 (0.38–0.82) |
| Okay for a woman to tell others if she is experiencing violence | - | - | 409/504 (81 %) | 241/427 (56 %) | 1.45 (1.22–1.72) |
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| Acceptable for a woman to refuse sex with her partner | 124/605 (41 %) | 95/274 (35 %) | 465/504 (92 %) | 305/427 (71 %) | 1.30 (1.03–1.65) |
| Okay for a woman to ask her husband to use a condom | - | - | 401/504 (80 %) | 242/427 (57 %) | 1.41 (1.18–1.69) |
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| Others in community would respect a man who made decisions jointly with his wife | - | - | 385/504 (76 %) | 227/427 (53 %) | 1.49 (0.91–2.44) |
| Man’s role to decide if his wife can work | - | - | 226/504 (45 %) | 288/427 (67 %) | 0.67 (0.54–0.81) |
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| Drunk at least once a month | - | - | 67/502 (13 %) | 56/422 (13 %) | 0.98 (0.56–1.70) |
| Woman experiencing (man perpetrating) violence who has told someone | 78/132 (59 %) | 54/112 (48 %) | 184/271 (68 %) | 170/301 (56 %) | 1.22 (0.81–1.85) |
aQuestion wording/item construction changed between baseline and follow-up to improve face validity - those baseline measures closest to the follow-up outcomes are presented here to assess underlying intervention/control community comparability, but baseline/follow-up comparisons are not possible
bRisk ratios calculated at the cluster-level, adjusted for community-pair, and weighted according to the number of observations per village. Adjusted risk ratios generated on the basis of expected number of events from a logistic regression model on individual data with independent variables including age and marital status
c Mean number of respondents per EA = 28.0 (range 18–35)
*χ2 p-value <0.005
Estimates of intervention effect on potential mediators among men, comparing outcome in intervention versus control communities
| Baseline | Follow-up | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Intervention | Control | Intervention | Control | aRRa (95 % CI) | |
| COMMUNITY LEVELb |
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| Okay for others in community to intervene if they know IPV is occurring | - | - | 92.5 (6.6) | 42.8 (11.9) | 47.6 (21.9–73.3) |
| People who have witnessed/heard violence who have responded appropriately | - | - | 62.8 (15.1) | 26.1 (10.7) | 33.3 (−4.0–70.6) |
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| Acceptable for a man to use violence against his partner | 27.7 (17.2) | 25.2 (15.8) | 7.3 (5.8) | 85.6 (6.6) | −75.5 (−92.4– −58.7) |
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| Acceptable for a woman to refuse sex with her partner | 53.5 (18.3) | 55.6 (14.0) | 97.5 (2.6) | 75.4 (12.9) | 23.0 (1.0–45.0) |
| Okay for a woman to ask her husband to use a condom | - | - | 88.6 (12.2) | 43.6 (8.8) | 41.8 (17.8–65.8) |
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| Others in community would respect a man who made decisions jointly with his wife | - | - | 88.9 (10.5) | 38.9 (10.9) | 48.3 (29.7–66.9) |
| Man’s role to decide if his wife can work | - | - | 14.8 (10.6) | 83.6 (5.4) | −67.0 (−82.1– −51.9) |
| RELATIONSHIP LEVEL (PARTNERED IN PAST YEAR) |
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| Discuss things that happen in day | 275/313 (88 %) | 292/335 (87 %) | 523/545 (96 %) | 318/434 (73 %) | 1.30 (0.98–1.72) |
| Discuss worries | 270/313 (86 %) | 294/335 (88 %) | 525/545 (96 %) | 326/434 (75 %) | 1.28 (1.00–1.64) |
| Discuss what you both like during sex | - | - | 481/544 (88 %) | 226/434 (52 %) | 1.70 (1.22–2.37) |
| Appreciate work partner does around house | - | - | 385/409 (94 %) | 231/326 (71 %) | 1.32 (1.04–1.69) |
| Appreciate work partner does outside house | - | - | 228/283 (81 %) | 128/244 (52 %) | 1.61 (1.04–2.50) |
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| Joint decision making | 208/234 (89 %) | 229/262 (87 %) | 378/443 (85 %) | 165/356 (46 %) | 1.90 (1.28–2.80) |
| Man helps around house | 180/304 (59 %) | 214/330 (65 %) | 396/411 (96 %) | 229/326 (70 %) | 1.42 (0.98–2.05) |
| Woman refused a job because husband doesn’t want her to work | 26/313 (8 %) | 26/335 (8 %) | 27/506 (5 %) | 123/410 (30 %) | 0.12 (0.02–0.89) |
| Woman participated in deciding how household finances spent | 234/306 (76 %)* | 271/327 (83 %)* | 416/449 (93 %) | 218/345 (63 %) | 1.48 (1.11–1.97) |
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| Concurrent partners | 109/270 (40 %) | 105/284 (37 %) | 139/508 (27 %) | 177/397 (45 %) | 0.60 (0.37–0.97) |
| Male partner often suspicious that female partner is unfaithful | - | - | 76/620 (12 %) | 221/525 (42 %) | 0.19 (0.02–1.60) |
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| Separated/divorced in past year | 3/307 (1 %) | 5/330 (2 %) | 7/545 (1 %) | 12/435 (3 %) | 0.52 (0.15–1.83) |
| INDIVIDUALS (PARTNERED IN PAST YEAR) | |||||
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| Acceptable for a man to use violence against his partner | 81/313 (26 %) | 83/335 (25 %) | 119/624 (19 %) | 454/525 (86 %) | 0.14 (0.02–1.11) |
| Okay for a woman to tell others if she is experiencing violence | - | - | 571/624 (92 %) | 221/525 (42 %) | 2.24 (1.39–3.61) |
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| Acceptable for a woman to refuse sex with her partner | 164/313 (52 %) | 184/335 (55 %) | 608/624 (97 %) | 400/525 (76 %) | 1.30 (0.96–1.78) |
| Okay for a woman to ask her husband to use a condom | - | - | 536/624 (86 %) | 245/525 (47 %) | 1.86 (1.28–2.70) |
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| Others in community would respect a man who made decisions jointly with his wife | - | - | 541/624 (87 %) | 202/525 (38 %) | 2.27 (1.53–3.36) |
| Man’s role to decide if his wife can work | - | - | 192/624 (31 %) | 448/525 (85 %) | 0.27 (0.06–1.25) |
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| Drunk at least once a month | 92/311 (30 %) | 110/329 (33 %) | 162/619 (26 %) | 200/525 (38 %) | 0.69 (0.38–1.27) |
| Woman experiencing (man perpetrating) violence who has told someone | 39/105 (37 %) | 50/116 (43 %) | 101/181 (56 %) | 172/452 (38 %) | 1.50 (0.80–2.83) |
aRisk ratios calculated at the cluster-level, adjusted for community-pair, and weighted according to the number of observations per village. Adjusted risk ratios generated on the basis of expected number of events from a logistic regression model on individual data with independent variables including age and marital status
b Mean number of respondents per EA = 28.0 (range 18–35)
*χ2 p-value <0.005
Associations between potential mediators and past year experience (women)/perpetration (men) of physical IPV among respondents partnered in past year
| Women - aRRa (95 % CI) for past year experience of IPV | Men - aRRa (95 % CI) for past year perpetration of IPV | |
|---|---|---|
| COMMUNITY LEVEL |
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| Okay for others in community to intervene if they know IPV is occurring | 0.94 (0.79–1.13) | 0.88 (0.74–1.04) |
| People who have witnessed/heard violence who have responded appropriately | 0.98 (0.87–1.10) | 0.91 (0.80–1.04) |
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| Acceptable for a man to use violence against his partner | 1.35 (1.18–1.54) | 1.18 (0.99–1.40) |
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| Acceptable for a woman to refuse sex with her partner | 0.85 (0.68–1.06) | 1.13 (0.90–1.43) |
| Okay for a woman to ask her husband to use a condom | 0.76 (0.61–0.95) | 0.90 (0.74–1.09) |
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| Others in community would respect a man who made decisions jointly with his wife | 0.79 (0.67–0.94) | 0.91 (0.79–1.06) |
| Man’s role to decide if his wife can work | 1.34 (1.17–1.54) | 1.16 (1.00–1.35) |
| RELATIONSHIP LEVEL (PARTNERED IN PAST YEAR) |
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| Discuss things that happen in day | 0.36 (0.23–0.56) | 0.99 (0.58–1.70) |
| Discuss worries | 0.31 (0.18–0.54) | 0.95 (0.63–1.43) |
| Discuss what you both like during sex | 0.42 (0.28–0.61) | 0.67 (0.41–1.08) |
| Appreciate work partner does around house | 0.44 (0.28–0.69) | 0.56 (0.35–0.90) |
| Appreciate work partner does outside house | 0.46 (0.27–0.80) | 0.53 (0.34–0.80) |
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| Joint decision making | 0.27 (0.16–0.47) | 0.61 (0.39–0.96) |
| Man helps around house | 0.63 (0.39–1.03) | 0.59 (0.35–0.98) |
| Woman refused a job because husband doesn’t want her to work | 4.65 (2.59–8.36) | 2.78 (1.70–4.56) |
| Woman participated in deciding how household finances spent | 0.38 (0.25–0.58) | 0.84 (0.58–1.23) |
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| Concurrent partners | 1.93 (0.78–4.77) | 2.79 (2.00–3.90) |
| Male partner often suspicious that female partner is unfaithful | 6.35 (3.73–10.80) | 4.51 (3.31–6.13) |
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| Separated/divorced in past year | 4.25 (1.49–12.13) | 2.13 (0.42–10.88) |
| INDIVIDUALS (PARTNERED IN PAST YEAR) | ||
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| Acceptable for a man to use violence against his partner | 2.45 (1.65–3.66) | 2.17 (1.43–3.28) |
| Okay for a woman to tell others if she is experiencing violence | 0.73 (0.49–1.11) | 0.52 (0.32–0.85) |
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| Acceptable for a woman to refuse sex with her partner | 0.46 (0.30–0.70) | 0.92 (0.55–1.56) |
| Okay for a woman to ask her husband to use a condom | 0.51 (0.34–0.76) | 0.85 (0.60–1.19) |
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| Others in community would respect a man who made decisions jointly with his wife | 0..39 (0.24–0.63) | 0.60 (0.43–0.83) |
| Man’s role to decide if his wife can work | 2.25 (1.38–3.69) | 1.92 (1.29–2.85) |
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| Drunk at least once a month | 1.61 (0.89–2.93) | 2.33 (1.82–3.00) |
aRisk ratios adjusted for site-pair, intervention arm, age, marital status, education and childhood experiences of abuse
SASA! impact on women’s past year experience/men’s past year perpetration of physical IPV, after adjustment for potential mediators
| Mediator adjusted for: | aRRa (95 % CI) for SASA! impact on women’s experience of IPV | % change in aRR after addition of mediator | aRRa (95 % CI) for SASA! impact on men’s perpetration of IPV | % change in aRR after addition of mediator |
|---|---|---|---|---|
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| Model without mediators | 0.44 (0.30–0.64) | N/A | 0.45 (0.30–0.70) | N/A |
| COMMUNITY LEVEL | ||||
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| Okay for others in community to intervene if they know IPV is occurring | 0.44 (0.29–0.68) | 0 % | 0.66 (0.34–1.27) | 38 % |
| People who have witnessed/heard violence who have responded appropriately | 0.43 (0.30–0.63) | −2 % | 0.52 (0.31–86) | 13 % |
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| Acceptable for a man to use violence against his partner | 0.83 (0.50–1.38) | 70 % | 0.97 (0.40–2.39) | 95 % |
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| Acceptable for a woman to refuse sex with her partner | 0.57 (0.34–0.96) | 23 % | 0.41 (0.26–0.64) | −7 % |
| Okay for a woman to ask her husband to use a condom | 0.62 (0.39–0.99) | 32 % | 0.56 (0.30–1.02) | 20 % |
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| Others in community would respect a man who made decisions jointly with his wife | 0.64 (0.40–1.01) | 36 % | 0.58(0.34–1.00) | 24 % |
| Man’s role to decide if his wife can work | 0.70 (0.48–1.03) | 46 % | 0.82 (0.42–1.59) | 67 % |
| RELATIONSHIP LEVEL (PARTNERED IN PAST YEAR) | ||||
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| Discuss things that happen in day | 0.51 (0.35–0.74) | 13 % | 0.46 (0.30–0.69) | 2 % |
| Discuss worries | 0.51 (0.36–0.73) | 13 % | 0.47 (0.31–0.70) | 4 % |
| Discuss what both like during sex | 0.53 (0.36–0.77) | 16 % | 0.49 (0.32–0.75) | 7 % |
| Appreciate work partner does around house | 0.46 (0.32–0.65) | 4 % | 0.48 (0.32–0.72) | 5 % |
| Appreciate work partner does outside house | 0.45 (0.31–0.65) | 2 % | 0.48 (0.32–0.71) | 5 % |
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| Joint decision making | 0.52 (0.37–0.74) | 14 % | 0.49 (0.34–0.72) | 7 % |
| Man helps around house | 0.47 (0.32–0.67) | 5 % | 0.49 (0.32–0.73) | 7 % |
| Woman refused a job because husband doesn’t want her to work | 0.48 (0.34–0.70) | 7 % | 0.51 (0.34–0.76) | 11 % |
| Woman participated in deciding how household finances spent | 0.47 (0.34–0.66) | 5 % | 0.47 (0.32–0.70) | 4 % |
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| Concurrent partners | - | - | 0.49 (0.34–0.73) | 7 % |
| Male partner often suspicious that female partner is unfaithful | 0.54 (0.38–0.76) | 18 % | 0.57 (0.40–0.81) | 22 % |
| INDIVIDUALS (PARTNERED IN PAST YEAR) | ||||
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| Acceptable for a man to use violence against his partner | 0.53 (0.36–0.80) | 16 % | 0.68 (0.43–1.09) | 42 % |
| Okay for a woman to tell others if she is experiencing violence | 0.46 (0.32–0.67) | 4 % | 0.57 (0.37–0.90) | 22 % |
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| Acceptable for a woman to refuse sex with her partner | 0.54 (0.37–0.77) | 18 % | 0.48 (0.31–0.73) | 5 % |
| Okay for a woman to ask her husband to use a condom | 0.51 (0.34–0.76) | 13 % | 0.47 (0.31–0.72) | 4 % |
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| Others in community would respect a man who made decisions jointly with his wife | 0.53 (0.36–0.78) | 16 % | 0.54 (0.36–0.83) | 16 % |
| Man’s role to decide if his wife can work | 0.51 (0.35–0.72) | 13 % | 0.58 (0.37–0.90) | 24 % |
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| Drunk at least once a month | - | - | 0.47 (0.33–0.69) | 4 % |
aAdjusted risk ratios calculated using modified poisson regression with cluster robust standard errors, and adjusted for site-pair, age, marital status and EA-level baseline prevalence of IPV