| Literature DB >> 32774451 |
Lindsay Stark1, Les Roberts2, Gary Yu3, Timothy M Tan4, Aishwarya Nagar5, Alastair Ager2,6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Accurately identifying the magnitude of gender-based violence (GBV) in humanitarian settings is hindered by logistical and methodological complexities. The 'Neighborhood Method', an adapted household survey that uses primary and secondary reporting to assess the prevalence of GBV in humanitarian settings, reduces the length of time and cost associated with traditional surveys. Primary female adult respondents disclose incidents of physical violence, intimate and non-intimate partner rape for themselves, other females in their homes (standard reporting) and other women and children in their social networks (secondary reporting). This study examines the reliability and validity of this inclusion of secondary reporting to determine the comparability of the Neighborhood Method to a traditional survey approach.Entities:
Keywords: Conflict; Gender-based violence; Humanitarian; Intimate partner violence; Neighborhood method; Rape; Secondary reporting; Survey methods
Year: 2020 PMID: 32774451 PMCID: PMC7409445 DOI: 10.1186/s13031-020-00301-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Confl Health ISSN: 1752-1505 Impact factor: 2.723
Summary of methodological features across the four studies
| Countries | Context | Years of Data Collection | Populations of Interest for Household Survey/Standard Self-Reporting (n) | Populations of Interest for Neighborhood Method/Secondary Reporting (n) | Recall Period |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Uganda | Internally displaced persons (IDP) camps | December 2006 to January 2007 | Adult women (204) | Sisters (268) | 12 months |
| Adult female neighbors (1206) | |||||
| Liberia | Resettled communities in an urban county | June 2007 to August 2007 | Adult women (600) | All females in respondents’ household (2460) | 18 months |
| Conflict-affected communities in a rural county | Adult female neighbor and all of the females in the neighbor’s household (10,287) | ||||
| Ethiopia/ Somalia | Refugee camps | June 2008 to July 2008 | Adult women (244) | All females in respondents’ household (597) | 18 months |
| Host community | Adult female neighbor and all of the females in the neighbor’s household (2709) | ||||
| Sri Lanka | Villages | June 2008 to August 2008 | Female age 16 or older (355) | All children in respondents’ household (845) | 18 months |
| Resettled villages IDP camps | Adult female neighbor andall of the children in the neighbor’s household (2364) |
Cohen’s kappa statistics for 23 matched interviews about two common neighbors in Kebribeya Camp in Ethiopia
| Type of GBV | Kappa statistic (95%CI) |
|---|---|
| Physical violence | 0.45 (0.27, 0.63) |
| Rape | 0.48 (0.46, 0.86) |
Prevalence of self-reported and secondary reported gender-based violence and results of two-sample z-test for differences in prevalence by reporting population
| Reporting population comparison | Type of violence | Study sample | Standard reported prevalence (n) | Secondary reported -prevalence(n) | z-test |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Respondent vs. neighbor head-of-household | Physical violence | Uganda | 51..70% (201) | 44.00% (1166) | |
| Physical violence | Liberia, Montserrado | 76.70% (296) | 69.20% (1170) | ||
| Physical violence | Liberia, Nimba | 83.30% (300) | 75.70% (1178) | ||
| Intimate partner rape | Uganda | 40.50% (200) | 25.10% (1109) | ||
| Intimate partner rape | Liberia, Montserrado | 76.70% (163) | 66.90% (640) | ||
| Intimate partner rape | Liberia, Nimba | 81.60% (152) | 72.00% (536) | ||
| Non-intimate partner rape | Uganda | 5.50% (201) | 3.30% (1160) | 0.12 | |
| Non-intimate partner rape | Liberia, Montserrado | 23.40% (295) | 13.60% (1131) | ||
| Non-intimate partner rape | Liberia, Nimba | 33.70% (300) | 24.20% (1135) | ||
| Respondent household vs. neighbor household | Physical violence | Liberia, Montserrado | 45.00% (1264) | 50.90% (4119) | |
| Physical violence | Liberia, Nimba | 44.00% (1163) | 50.90% (3640) | ||
| Physical violence, women | Ethiopia, Aw Barre Town | 57.60% (118) | 57.90% (442) | 0.96 | |
| Physical violence, women | Ethiopia, Kebribeya Camp | 63.60% (151) | 49.40% (514) | ||
| Physical violence, women | Sri Lanka, IDP sites | 13.00% (177) | 14.00% (486) | 0.74 | |
| Physical violence, women | Sri Lanka, villages | 10.30% (252) | 9.20% (721) | 0.59 | |
| Physical violence, boys | Sri Lanka, IDP sites | 2.00% (152) | 5.50% (433) | 0.07 | |
| Physical violence, boys | Sri Lanka, villages | 6.70% (164) | 3.60% (494) | 0.10 | |
| Physical violence, girls | Ethiopia, Aw Barre Town | 29.20% (120) | 28.50% (417) | 0.89 | |
| Physical violence, girls | Ethiopia, Kebribeya Camp | 29.60% (152) | 22.70% (446) | 0.09 | |
| Physical violence, girls | Sri Lanka, IDP sites | 2.90% (139) | 7.60% (344) | 0.05 | |
| Physical violence, girls | Sri Lanka, villages | 3.40% (176) | 3.70% (482) | 0.84 | |
| Intimate partner rape | Liberia, Montserrado | 73.50% (268) | 74.70% (958) | 0.68 | |
| Intimate partner rape | Liberia, Nimba | 69.00% (197) | 74.90% (582) | 0.11 | |
| Non-intimate partner rape | Liberia, Montserrado | 19.70% (1240) | 20.50% (3999) | 0.53 | |
| Non-intimate partner rape | Liberia, Nimba | 23.30% (1145) | 26.80% (3516) | ||
| Non-intimate partner rape, women | Ethiopia, Aw Barre Town | 43.00% (121) | 42.00% (443) | 0.85 | |
| Non-intimate partner rape, women | Ethiopia, Kebribeya Camp | 34.00% (150) | 34.40% (514) | 0.92 | |
| Non-intimate partner rape, women | Sri Lanka, IDP sites | 6.80% (176) | 2.50% (476) | ||
| Non-intimate partner rape, women | Sri Lanka, villages | 3.20% (251) | 3.30% (707) | 0.96 | |
| Non-intimate partner rape, girls | Ethiopia, Aw Barre Town | 2.50% (120) | 8.40% (417) | ||
| Non-intimate partner rape, girls | Ethiopia, Kebribeya Camp | 1.32% (152) | 4.00% (446) | 0.11 | |
| Non-intimate partner rape, girls | Sri Lanka, IDP sites | 0.00% (139) | 0.30% (342) | 0.52 | |
| Non-intimate partner rape, girls | Sri Lanka, villages | 0.00% (176) | 0.20% (481) | 0.55 | |
| Respondent vs. sister | Physical violence | Uganda | 51.70% (201) | 36.50% (266) | |
| Intimate partner rape | Uganda | 40.50% (200) | 22.10% (254) | ||
| Non-intimate partner rape | Uganda | 5.50% (201) | 3.40% (263) | 0.28 |
Intra-class correlation coefficients for comparisons of three different types of secondary reporting vs. standard reporting among women (≥ 18 years of age)
| Reporting population comparison | Type of violence | ICC |
|---|---|---|
| Respondent household vs. neighbor household | Physical violence | 0.97 |
| Intimate partner rape | – | |
| Non-intimate partner rape | 0.99 |
“---” denotes no self-reported concordant data available for women and girls for intimate partner rape in sub-group analyses between respondent households versus neighbor households
Intra-class correlation coefficients for comparisons of three different types of secondary reporting vs. standard reporting among girls (< 18 years of age)
| Reporting population comparison | Type of violence | ICC |
|---|---|---|
| Respondent household vs. neighbor household | Physical violence | 0.97 |
| Intimate partner rape | – | |
| Non-intimate partner rape | 0.72 |
“---” denotes no self-reported concordant data available for women and girls for intimate partner rape in sub-group analyses between respondent households versus neighbor households
Intra-class correlation coefficients for comparisons of three different types of secondary reporting vs. standard reporting
| Reporting population comparison | Type of violence | ICC |
|---|---|---|
| Respondent vs. neighbor head-of-household | Physical violence | 0.98 |
| Intimate partner rape | 0.98 | |
| Non-intimate partner rape | 0.94 | |
| Respondent household vs. neighbor household | Physical violence | 0.99 |
| Intimate partner rape | 0.99 | |
| Non-intimate partner rape | 0.99 | |
| Respondent vs. sister | Physical violence | 0.22 |
| Intimate partner rape | 0.87 | |
| Non-intimate partner rape | 0.29 |