| Literature DB >> 35193906 |
Natalia V Lewis1, Muzrif Munas2,3, Manuela Colombini4, A F d'Oliveira5, Stephanie Pereira5, Satya Shrestha2,6, Thilini Rajapakse3, Amira Shaheen7, Poonam Rishal6, Abdulsalam Alkaiyat7, Alison Richards2,8, Claudia M Garcia-Moreno9, Gene S Feder2, Loraine J Bacchus4.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: To synthesise evidence on the effectiveness, cost-effectiveness and barriers to responding to violence against women (VAW) in sexual and reproductive health (SRH) services in low/middle-income countries (LMICs).Entities:
Keywords: obstetrics; organisation of health services; public health; reproductive medicine; sexual medicine
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35193906 PMCID: PMC8867339 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2021-051924
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Study inclusion and exclusion criteria with justification
| Inclusion criteria | Exclusion criteria | |
| Recipients of healthcare services—women of reproductive age (15–49 years old) | Female children and girls under 15 years old. | |
| Any intervention addressing violence against women (VAW). | No intervention | |
| Controlled studies: usual care, no VAW intervention, delayed VAW intervention, minimal intervention (eg, information provision). | ||
| Outcome is an event or measurement collected for participants in a study. | ||
| Primary intervention studies of any design. Primary studies that used quantitative designs such as randomised controlled trials, controlled and uncontrolled before-after studies, interrupted time series studies, cross-sectional studies. | Systematic reviews. We used systematic reviews to identify potentially eligible primary studies. | |
| Context | Studies conducted in SRH services in a country defined as LMIC by the World Bank, including humanitarian settings. | |
| Report type | Full-text peer-reviewed studies, conference abstracts, grey literature, unpublished studies. | Animal studies, opinion pieces, editorials and publication which did not report primary data. |
HIV, human immunodeficiency virus; IPV, intimate partner violence; LMICs, low-income and middle-income countries; SRH, sexual and reproductive health; STI, sexually transmitted infection; VAW, violence against women.
Figure 1Flow diagram. LMICs, low/middle-income countries; SRH, sexual and reproductive health; VAW, violence against women.
Included interventions mapped on the Health Systems Wheel framework and models of service integration
| Study ID | Study design | Leadership and governance | Multi-sectoral coordination | Workforce development | Healthcare delivery | Infrastructure | Financing | Information | Level of VAW service integration |
| Abeid | CBA | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | Systems | ||
| Arora | UBA | ● | ● | Provider | |||||
| Bott | UBA | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | Facility |
| Bress | Cross-sectional | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | Provider | |
| Brown and Van Zyl | RCT | ● | ● | Facility | |||||
| Cockcroft | cRCT | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | Provider | ||
| Cripe | RCT | ● | ● | ● | Provider | ||||
| Christofides and Jewkes | Qualitative | ● | ● | ● | Facility | ||||
| Haberland | RCT | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | Facility | ||
| Jayatilleke | UBA | ● | ● | ● | Provider | ||||
| Khalili | RCT | ● | ● | Provider | |||||
| Kim | UBA | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | Facility | |
| Laisser | Cross-sectional | ● | ● | ● | ● | Systems | |||
| Matseke and Peltzer | UBA | ● | ● | ● | Systems | ||||
| Mutisya | RCT | ● | ● | Provider | |||||
| Samandari | Cross-sectional | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | Systems |
| Sapkota | RCT | ● | ● | Provider | |||||
| Settergren | cRCT | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | Systems |
| Sikkema | RCT | ● | ● | ● | Provider | ||||
| Sithole | Cross-sectional | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | Facility | |
| Smith | UBA | ● | ● | Facility | |||||
| Taghizadeh | RCT | ● | ● | Provider | |||||
| Turan | Cross-sectional | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | ● | Systems | |
| Undie | Cross-sectional | ● | ● | ● | ● | Facility | |||
| Vakily | RCT | ● | ● | ||||||
| Wagman | cRCT | ● | ● | ● | ● | Facility |
Provider-level integration when one trained healthcare provider (HCP) delivers most of the VAW work. Facility-level integration when several trained HCPs deliver most VAW work within one healthcare facility. Systems-level integration when trained HCP identifies patients affected by VAW, provides first-line support and clinical care, and then refers them to higher level facilities with VAW specialist or external VAW services.
CBA, controlled before-after; cRCT, cluster randomised controlled trial; RCT, randomised controlled trial; UBA, uncontrolled before-after; VAW, violence against women.
Figure 2Process-oriented logic model of interventions in sexual and reproductive health services addressing violence against women in low-income and middle-income countries. HCP, healthcare provider; SRH, sexual and reproductive health; VAW, violence against women.
Health-related effects and outcomes in quantitative randomised and non-randomised evaluations of interventions addressing VAW in SRH services
| Intervention category | Improvement | Mixed effect | Null effect | Studies, n | ||||
| RCT | Non-randomised | RCT | Non-randomised | RCT | Non-randomised | |||
| Direct effect on health-related cognition and emotions | HCP knowledge |
| Jayatilleke | 4 | ||||
| HCP attitudes | Smith | 3 | ||||||
| HCP readiness | Jayatilleke | 2 | ||||||
| Women’s knowledge | Haberland | 1 | ||||||
| Women’s attitude | Haberland | 1 | ||||||
| Women’s readiness | Haberland | 1 | ||||||
| Intermediate effects on health-related behaviour and practices | HCP behaviour | Jayatilleke | Haberland | Smith | 4 | |||
| Women’s behaviour | Haberland | Brown and Van Zyl | 2 | |||||
| Health outcomes | Re-exposure to VAW | Brown and Van Zyl | Matseke and Peltzer | Haberland | 3 | |||
| Any harm | Brown and Van Zyl | 2 | ||||||
|
| ||||||||
| Direct effects on health-related cognition and emotions | HCP attitudes | Bott | 1 | |||||
| HCP readiness | Bott | 1 | ||||||
| Women attitude | Settergren | 1 | ||||||
| Intermediate effect on behaviour and practices | HCP behaviour | Settergren | 1 | |||||
| Women behaviour | Kim | Settergren | 4 | |||||
| Health outcomes | Re-exposure to VAW |
| Wagman | Settergren | 3 | |||
| Sexual and reproductive health |
| Wagman | 2 | |||||
|
| ||||||||
| Intermediate effects on health-related behaviour and practices | Women behaviour |
| Sikkema | Cripe | Arora | 4 | ||
| Health outcomes | Re-exposure to VAW |
| Arora | Taghizaden | 4 | |||
| Sexual and reproductive health | Sikkema | 1 | ||||||
| Physical health | Arora | 1 | ||||||
| Mental health |
| Arora | Cripe | 6 | ||||
| Quality of life |
| Cripe | 1 | |||||
| Studies, n | 7 | 7 | 6 | 2 | 7 | 3 | ||
Bold indicates studies that reported sample size calculation.
HCP, healthcare providers; RCT, randomised controlled trial; SRH, sexual and reproductive health; VAW, violence against women.