| Literature DB >> 30907275 |
R El Arab1, M Sagbakken2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The Syrian conflict has resulted in major humanitarian crises. The risk is particularly high amongst female children who face additional gendered risks, such as harassment and sexual violence, including a rise in prevalence of child marriage. Despite the importance of this topic, current literature remains relatively scarce.Entities:
Keywords: Child marriage; Syrian refugees; gender; reproductive health; reproductive rights
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30907275 PMCID: PMC6442155 DOI: 10.1080/16549716.2019.1585709
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Glob Health Action ISSN: 1654-9880 Impact factor: 2.640
PICO framework and search terms.
| Objective | Patient/problem | Intervention/exposure | Comparison | Outcome |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Refugees in Jordan and Lebanon | Child marriage OR Early marriage OR Child bride | No comparator | Causes OR Reasons OR Motives |
| 2 | Refugees in Jordan and Lebanon | Child marriage OR Early marriage OR Child bride | No comparator | Reproductive health OR Reproductive rights OR Contraceptive access |
Critical Appraisal Skills Programme (CASP), Save The Children (STC) Focus group discussion (FGD).
| Criteria | Mourtada et al. [ | STC [ | Bartels et al. [ | Acousta and Thomas [ | Cherri et al. [ | El-Mowafi et al. [ | Sahbani et al. [ | UN Women Report [ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Statement of aim of research | The aim of the study is to gain information about the factors that promote child marriage practices amongst Syrian refugees in Lebanon. | The aim of this report is to address the growing problem of child marriage among Syrian girl refugees in Jordan. | This study explores the underlying factors contributing to child marriage among Syrian refugees in Lebanon with the goal of informing community-based strategies to address the issue. | The aim of the research was to present a comprehensive assessment of the causes and consequences of early child marriage in Syrian refugee communities in Jordan. | To determine the sexual and reproductive health needs of Syrian refugees in Lebanon (aged 15–49). | To explore the Syrian child bride knowledge and attitude towards experiences of contraceptive use by examining refugee camps in Jordan. | To understand the challenges faced by international humanitarian agencies. The challenges to be addressed include the health issues faced by child marriage refugees in Jordan. | The aim of the study was to provide an assessment of child protection issues in Jordan and identify the needs of child brides in such conflict regions. |
| Appropriateness of methodology | Qualitative design is ideal as it helps provide insight into the views of various stakeholders (child brides, families) and service providers). | Narrative research. The goal is to provide a comprehensive overview of the existing situation in Jordan. | Survey research. The researcher developed a mixed-methods data tool (collecting both qualitative and quantitative data). | Narrative review. Early marriage causes and consequences were detailed. | Qualitative research through FGD can provide information on the challenges faced by child brides and provide opportunities for more in-depth discussion. | Qualitative research using focus group discussion. | Narrative review. | Survey research using a questionnaire, and qualitative data were obtained through in-depth interviews with key community |
| Research design was appropriate to address the research aim | Yes. The design is well organised. | Unclear. The criteria behind the themes chosen for discussion are limited. | Yes. The design is appropriate as it attempts to understand views of participants while identifying trends, requiring both qualitative and quantitative data. | Unclear. The criteria behind the themes chosen for discussion are limited. | Yes. The research details the need for qualitative over quantitative research. | Unclear. The details on research design and rationale are not provided. | Unclear. The criteria behind the themes chosen for discussion are limited. | Choice of questionnaire was not explained. However, the appropriateness of the design and the need for survey-based methods to increase generalisation of findings were addressed. |
| Population recruitment strategy was appropriate for the research | Moderate. The selection of focus group participants and the type of sampling is not explicit. | N/A | Choice of families and child brides is through convenience sampling means. The rationale behind the same is less discussed. | N/A | Yes. The number of participants approached, who participated and who withdrew is clear. The rationale for the choice of these participants is also clear. | Not provided. | N/A | Clarity in choice of instruments and their purpose is evident. |
| Data collection was done in a way that addressed the research issue | Yes. Clarity in data collection is evident. | Unclear. No clear selection of search words or inclusion criteria. Given that the goal of the report was to act as a white paper and provide information, appropriate information is available. | Yes. | The choice of material and the actual search process is unclear. | Yes. The data collection was carried out using an interview template developed and tested beforehand. | Yes. The researcher argues that the focus group guide was developed based on evidence from prior research evidence on the subject. | Unclear. No clear selection of search words or inclusion criteria. Given that the goal of the report was to act as a white paper and provide information, appropriate information is available. | Yes. |
| Ethical concerns were considered | Yes. The review board was identified. Informed consent and confidentiality were assured. | N/A | Yes. Queen’s University Health Sciences and Affiliated Teaching Hospitals Research Ethics Board were identified as the key ethics board. Consent was obtained in Arabic. | N/A | Yes. Verbal consent was gained. Assurances regarding confidentiality and anonymity were made. | Not available. | N/A | Ethical concerns were well addressed. Informed consent and confidentiality were assured. |
| Data analysis was sufficient and rigorous | Yes. Thematic analysis was carried out. | Thematic analysis. | The data were analysed using quantitative and qualitative methods to provide trend analysis as well as thematic analysis. | Thematic analysis. | Yes. Inductive, open-theme analysis was carried out. | Thematic analysis. | Thematic analysis. | Descriptive analysis, thematic analysis. |
| Clear statement of findings | Yes. | Yes. | Yes. | Yes. | Yes. | Yes. | Yes. | Yes. |
| Value of research | Recommendations are provided on how child marriages can be avoided in refugee communities. | Recommends actions by various stakeholder groups to address inherent motives regarding child marriages. | A range of factors contribute to child marriage, including poverty, lack of educational opportunities and concerns about violence. | The occurrence of child marriage is linked to a lack of financial support and guidance, while proper access to security is also identified as a theme. The report addresses the need for better understanding of the financial and emotional wellbeing of communities. | Interventions to improve health and reproductive rights of child brides were essential in refugee communities, including awareness and access. | There is a need to address both emotional needs and knowledge gain. Attitude and practice-related interventions are essential. | Identify health agency-level and humanitarian actor-level actions that can be taken. | Overarching recommendations are detailed on the challenges of child marriage and its impact in terms of physical and sexual violence. |
| Overall implications | Methodological rigour could have been improved by using better measures of sampling. | Need for clarity in choice of literature. | Methodologically sound. However, the research instrument was piloted with a small sample. | Need for clarity in choice of literature. | Methodologically sound. The rationale behind the research method and the presentation of findings were easy to understand. | Need for clarity in participant choice and data collection. | Need for clarity in choice of literature. | Methodological rigour is high. |
Figure 1.PRISMA flowchart.
| Authors | Aim | Research design | Study methodology | Findings | Themes discussed |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mourtada et al. [ | The aim of the study is to gain information about the factors that promote child marriage practices amongst Syrian refugees in Lebanon. The study also attempts to identify recommendations on mitigating these drivers leading to child marriage practices. | Qualitative research and cross-sectional design. | Eight focus group studies were conducted with married and unmarried women, and mothers and fathers. Eleven key informant interviews were conducted with service providers. | Child marriage was a growing cause of concern amongst refugees in Lebanese camps. The key reasons cited include economic and safety-related factors. | Motives for child marriage: reduction in age of marriage, worsening of economic conditions, disrupted education, feelings of physical insecurity, and challenges related to community-linked decision making. |
| STC (Save the Child) | The aim of this report is to address the growing problem of child marriage among Syrian girl refugees in Jordan. | Narrative review. | The research adopts a narrative review approach, where the goal is to highlight the underlying lack of opportunities that are available to these Syrian refugees. | The findings of the report revolve around identifying potential challenges which are systemic in contributing to the rise of child marriage, and the need to reduce their negative impact. | Motives for child marriage: parental pressure, economic and tradition-led decisions, physical protection. |
| Bartels et al. | This study explores the underlying factors contributing to child marriage among Syrian refugees in Lebanon with the goal of informing community-based strategies to address the issue. | Survey research, cross-sectional. | The study used a mixed-methods data collection approach, where 1422 self-interpreted stories were collected from married and unmarried girls. These data were analysed using quantitative and qualitative methods to provide trend analysis and thematic analysis. | The findings from the quantitative analysis show that there are different perspectives associated with female and male participants’ interpretation of child marriage challenges. From the qualitative assessment of the independent stories, it is observed that there is a continued perception of overprotection, challenge of economic hardship and meeting societal concerns and accepted norms. Syrian girls and mothers were more likely to share honest experiences and their perspectives related to protection, security and harassment, as well as education. Male participants highlighted financial security challenges. | Motives identified: financial hardship, lack of educational opportunities, parental pressure, safety concerns around sexual and gender-based violence (SGBV), honour and tradition. |
| Acousta and Thomas [ | The aim of the research was to present a comprehensive assessment of early child marriage causes and consequences in Syrian refugee communities in Jordan. | Narrative review of the literature. | The research adopts a narrative review approach, where the goal is to highlight the underlying challenges linked to child marriage faced by refugee child brides. | The issue of early/child marriage is recognised in the research as a common one. The authors acknowledge that the occurrence of child marriage is linked to lack of financial support and guidance, as well as proper access to security. The report also finds that early child marriage is linked to limited reproductive rights, including inability to choose the age of pregnancy or the use of contraceptives, and high risk of HIV. | Motives for child marriage: financial constraints and traditions. |
| Cherri et al. | To determine the sexual and reproductive health needs of Syrian refugees in Lebanon (aged 15–49). | Focus group discussion, qualitative study. | Eleven focus group discussions were conducted across four refugee centres in Lebanon. | Early marriage was a recent trend that most women acknowledged. This was largely due to financial challenges and the rising presence of uncertainty including regarding access to housing and basic facilities. Married women also highlight issues linked to costs as a main barrier in contraceptive use, with the need to increase awareness of subsidised sexual and reproductive health services. | Impact of child marriage on child: lack of agency regarding reproductive rights; lack of access and lack of knowledge. |
| El-Mowafi et al. | To explore Syrian child brides' knowledge of and attitudes towards experiences with contraceptive use by examining refugee camps in Jordan. | Qualitative research using focus group discussion. | The researcher conducted six focus group discussions with women and girls who married before the age of 18. | The findings show that all early marriages are through family members and most women and girls become pregnant repeatedly, with a lack of support regarding their personal choice. Many experience violence (physical and sexual). | Reproductive rights-related themes: lack of agency combined with parental pressure; lack of knowledge; willingness to learn about emergency contraceptive options. |
| Sahbani et al. [ | To understand the challenges faced by international humanitarian agencies and member states. The challenges to be addressed include the health issues faced by child marriage refugees in Jordan. | Qualitative research. | Narrative in-depth review. | The authors conclude that a range of factors contribute to the ability of a girl or a woman to make a choice regarding her sexual preferences or reproductive rights. Early marriage can negatively influence health, and early pregnancy due to lack of access to the right healthcare support can also create major challenges. | Reproductive rights-related themes: systematic abuse of vulnerable women regarding managing sexual preferences and choice of reproductive rights. |
| UN Women Report | The aim of the study was to provide an assessment of child protection issues in Jordan and identify the needs of child brides in such conflict regions. The report aimed at understanding the risks that Syrian refugee families (women and girls) in Jordan and Syria face. | Cross sectional study. Survey research. | The research targeted Syrian refugee families living in host communities in Jordan to address their views. Quantitative and qualitative data were obtained through in-depth interviews with key community informants, focus group discussion with married and unmarried refugees, and a survey questionnaire. | The findings show that the rate of early marriage is high, and the key driver of such early marriage is linked to parental pressure, community-level honour and expectations, financial challenges, and lack of education and autonomy. The study also shows that child marriage refugees continue to face reproductive rights-related challenges even after marriage and have limited decision-making capabilities. | Financial distress; economic hardship for the parents; honour-linked marriage decisions; lack of alternative options; and need for physical security. |