Title: Violence Against Women
1Violence Against Women
- Martin Donohoe, M.D., F.A.C.P.
2Violence Against WomenOverview
- Definitions
- Epidemiology
- Sexual Assault/Rape
- Sequelae of Domestic Violence
3Violence Against WomenOverview
- Recognition and Management
- The Developing World
- human rights abuses
- female genital mutilation
4Objectives
- Understand common forms of violence against women
- Learn to recognize and manage violence against
women - Exposure to international issues related to
violence against women
5Definitions of Violence Against Women
- Individual
- Any act of verbal or physical force, coercion,
or life-threatening deprivation that causes
physical or psychological harm, humiliation, or
arbitrary deprivation of liberty, or that
perpetuates female subordination
6Individual Violence Against Women(examples)
- partner abuse
- sexual assault/marital rape
- forced prostitution
- forced noncompliance with contraception
- female genital mutilation
- slavery
-
7Definitions of Violence Against Women
- Societal
- Structural forms of discrimination or
deprivation that affect women as a class -
8Societal Violence Against Women(examples)
- poverty
- impaired access to employment or education
- divorce restrictions
- salary inequalities
- political marginalization
- impaired access to reproductive health services
9Epidemiology of VAW
- Lifetime prevalence of assault/sexual abuse
- 12 of adolescent girls
- 15 of college women
- 20 of adult women
10Epidemiology of VAW
- 2 - 4 million women assaulted per year
- every 15 seconds a woman is beaten
- 5 of partner abuse is female on male
- (homosexual/bisexual abuse also exists)
11Prevalence of Domestic Violence
- P-care
- 1/4 women abused at some point in her life
- 1/7 women abused within preceding 12 months
- ER
- 1/4 of women seeking care (any reason)
- 35 of women treated for trauma
12Prevalence of Domestic Violence
- Psych
- 1/4 women who attempt suicide
- 1/4 women treated for psychiatric symptoms
- 55 lifetime prevalence for women with depression
13Abuse in Pregnancy
- Incidence 8 - 20
- Most common sites of beating are abdomen, head
and breasts - Increases risk of low birth weight/pre-term
labor/delayed prenatal care
14Prevalence of Domestic Violence
- OB/Gyn
- 1/6 women during pregnancy
- Peds
- 50 - 70 of mothers of abused children
15High Risk Occupations Prostitutes
- 80 have been physically assaulted
- 80 have been threatened with a knife, gun, or
other weapon - 67 have been raped
16Prostitution in the U.S.
- 0.6 of men admit to paying for sex in the last
year - 16.3 at some point in their lives
- 694 clients/prostitute/year average
- 1.6 of women admitted they had sex with a
person they paid, or who paid them for sex
since age 18
17High Risk Occupations The Military
- Completed and attempted sexual assaults 20 times
more common among female soldiers than among
other government employees - higher rates of chronic pelvic pain,
dysmenorrhea, abnormal periods, PMS, and
dissatisfaction with sexual relations - correlate with military sexual trauma history
18The Military
- VA Study (191 inpatients 411 outpatients)
- 24 under age 50 report domestic violence in the
past year (7 over age 50) - 90 under age 50 report a history of sexual
harassment (37 over age 50)
19High Risk GroupsRunaway and Homeless Youth
- Survival sex
- the exchange of sex for shelter, food, drugs or
money - 28 of street youths, 10 of shelter youth (out
of 1 - 2 million runaway adolescents/year) - association with violence, victimization, STDs,
and pregnancy
20High Risk Perpetrators
- Male college athletes
- constitute 3.3 of male student body
- involved in 19 of sexual assaults
- Fraternities
- individual and gang rapes more common
21Deaths from Domestic Violence
- 4,000 domestic violence deaths/year
- over 1/2 of women murdered in U.S. are killed by
a current or former partner - 1/2 to 3/4 of the 1,000 - 1,500 murder suicides
per year involve domestic violence
22Victims Who Kill Their Abusers
- Between 2,000 and 4,000 women imprisoned for
murdering their abusers - Battered women who claim self-defense (the only
legally justifiable reason for murder) in
criminal trials are acquitted only 25 of the
time - 63 of young men aged 11-20 serving time for
homicide have killed their mothers abuser
23Race/SES and Domestic Violence
- Seen in all age, race, and SES brackets
- May be more common in African-American, but
- confounders lower SES, fewer resources, more
likely to be seen in ER or to use public shelters - May be more common in Latinos, but
- confounders as above
- However, more women hold more traditional ideas
regarding spousal roles...
24Common Characteristics ofAbuse Victims
- low self-esteem
- guilt
- self-blame
- denial
- traditional attitudes regarding womens roles
- have children
- poor financial resources
- few job skills
- less education
- few friends
- history of childhood abuse
25Common Characteristicsof Abusers
- low self-esteem
- dependency
- jealousy
- poor communication skills
- unemployed/underemployed
- abuse alcohol/other drugs
- have witnessed or experienced abuse as children
- abuse their own children
26Men with Restraining Orders
- 75 have criminal record
- 50 have history of violent crime
- 15 violated R.O. over 6 months
- 30 arraigned for a violent crime over 6 months
27Child Abuse
- seen in 1/3 - 1/2 of families where partner abuse
occurs - in one 3 month study of 146 children who
witnessed partner abuse - all sons over age 14 attempted to protect their
mothers - 62 were physically injured in the process
28Children and Partner Abuse
- Children witness up to 85 of episodes of partner
abuse - child abuse
- Children of abuse victims show decrements in
academic and emotional development and are more
likely to become abusers themselves
29Rape
- Unwanted, forced penetration (oral/vaginal/anal)
- reported by 33 -46 of women who are physically
abused - annual incidence ³ 80/100,000 women
- 7 of all violent crimes
- lifetime prevalence up to 25
30Date Rape
- 40 of college women report forced sexual
contact, attempted rape, or completed rape - most common ignoring victims protests
- independent of school demographics
- gt25 of college males admit to using sexually
coercive behaviors - 2/3 of college males report engaging in unwanted
sexual intercourse - reasons peer pressure, desire to be liked
31Spousal Rape
- occurs in 10 - 15 of all marriage
- more violent, less frequently reported then
non-spousal rape - not illegal in many U.S. states/other countries
32Rape
- 5 chance of pregnancy
- 25 chance of acquiring STD
- GC 6 - 12
- Chlamydia 4 - 17
- Syphilis 0.5 - 3
- 1 -2/1,000 odds of acquiring HIV
- varies
33Rape
- Underreported
- Less than 1 of rapists convicted
- Average prison time for those convicted
- rape 1 year
- armed robbery 3 - 5 years
- murder 8 years
- Chemical Castration Laws
34How We View Women
- Montana
- 2nd violation of animal abuse statute
- 1,000 fine 2 years in jail
- 2nd violation spousal abuse
- 500 6 months in jail
35Public Policy
- Some health insurers refuse to cover abuse
victims (pre-existing condition) - states legislating against this practice
- 2002 Federal funds to fight abuse and neglect
- Elder abuse - 153 million
- Domestic abuse - 520 million
- Child abuse - 6.7 billion
36The Physicians Duties in Caring for Victims of
Sexual Assaults
- Medical
- obtain medical history
- evaluate and treat physical injuries
- obtain cultures
- treat any pre-existing infection
- NEJM 1995 332234-7
37The Physicians Duties in Caring for Victims of
Sexual Assaults
- Medical
- offer post-exposure HIV prophylaxis
- offer post-coital contraception (vs. in utero
paternity testing f/b selective abortion) - arrange medical followup
- provide counseling
- NEJM 1995 332234-7
38Physical Examination ofSexual Assault Victims
- Collection of clothing
- External evaluation
- abrasions, lacerations, ecchymoses, bite marks
- Oral cavity
- secretions, injuries, collection of samples for
culture - NEJM 1995 332234-7
39Physical Examination ofSexual Assault Victims
- Genitalia
- hair combing, hair sampling, vaginal secretions,
collection of samples for culture, injuries - Rectum
- injuries, collection of samples for culture
- NEJM 1995 332234-7
40Prophylaxis for Adult Victims ofSexual
AssaultAntibiotic Prophylaxis
- Ceftriaxone (250 mg IM) or Spectinomycin (2 g IM)
- PLUS
- Doxycycline (100 mg po bid x 7d) or Azithromycin
(1 g po x 1) - PLUS
- Metronidazole ( 2 g po x 1)
41Prophylaxis for Adult Victims ofSexual
AssaultPrevention of Pregnancy
- 2 OCP tablets (each with 50 mcg ethinyl
estradiol) po q12 x 2 - OR
- 3 OCP tablets (each with 35 mcg ethinyl
estradiol) po q12 x 2 - PLUS
- Antiemetic
42Prophylaxis for Adult Victims ofSexual Assault
- HIV Prophylaxis (studies ongoing)
- Consult ID
- start up to 72 after rape
- Other (as indicated)
- tetanus toxoid
- Hep B vax/HBIG
43Factors That Perpetuate Gender-Based
ViolenceCultural
- Gender-specific socialization
- Cultural definitions of appropriate sex roles
- Expectations of roles with relationships
- Belief in the inherent superiority of males
- Values that give men proprietary rights over
women - Notions of the family as private/under male
control - Customs of marriage (bride price/dowry/exogamy)
- Acceptability/glorification of violence as a
means to resolve conflict - Soc Sci Med 1994 391165-79
44Factors That Perpetuate Gender-Based
ViolenceEconomic
- Womens economic dependence on men
- Limited access to cash and credit
- Discriminatory laws regarding inheritance,
property rights, use of communal lands and
maintenance after divorce - Limited access to employment in formal and
informal sector - Limited access to education and training for
women - Soc Sci Med 1994 391165-79
45Factors That Perpetuate Gender-Based
ViolenceLegal
- Plural systems of law customary, common,
religious - Lesser legal status of women
- Laws regarding divorce, child custody,
maintenance and inheritance - Legal definitions of rape and domestic abuse
- Low levels of legal literacy among women
- Insensitive treatment of women by police and
judiciary - Soc Sci Med 1994 391165-79
46Factors That Perpetuate Gender-Based
ViolencePolitical
- Under-representation of women in power, politics
and in legal and medical professions - Domestic violence not taken seriously
- Notions of family being private and beyond the
control of the state - Risk of challenge to status quo/religious laws
- Limited organization of women as a political
force (e.g. through autonomous womens
organizations) - Limited participation of women in
organized/formal political system Soc Sci Med
1994 391165-79
47Economic Gender DisparitiesThe Bad News
- Worldwide, women do 2/3 of the worlds paid and
unpaid work (1/3 paid, 2/3 unpaid) - receive 10 of global income
- hold less than 10 of legislative seats
- own 1 of global property
- Women in the U.S. working full-time make
0.75/1.00 males
48Economic Gender DisparitiesThe Bad News
- Women make up 46 of the U.S. workforce, but hold
lt 2 of senior-level management positions in
Fortune 500 companies - 2002 5/50 governors are female, 13 of
Congresspersons, 4 of the top 21 university
presidents
49Economic Gender DisparitiesThe Good News (U.S.)
- From 1987 - 1999
- of female-owned firms has doubled (9.1 million)
- of workers employed by such firms has
quadrupled (27.5 million)
50Gender DisparitiesMixed News (U.S.)
- High school sports
- 2.5 million female athletes (1999) vs. 300,000
(early 1970s) - But 90 of womens college sports teams were
coached by women when Title IX enacted (1972)
2007 - 42
51Pornography
- 4 billion adult entertainment business
- Per day
- 23-60 million unique visitors to pornography
websites - 2-3 million unique visitors to the five largest
news sites
52Pornography and Violence Against Women
- After viewing pornography, males show
- heightened levels of aggression and arousal
- increased likelihood of saying that rape is OK
under certain circumstances (e.g. woman in sexy
clothing, man being led on, etc.)
53Violence Against Homosexuals
- GSA
- Gay marriages / civil unions
- Discrimination legal
- Causes..
54Health Consequences of ViolenceAgainst
WomenPhysical Sequelae
- Trauma bruises, fractures, lacerations
- Chronic pain headaches, AP, pelvic pain,
myalgias, LBP, CP - Hyperventilation Syndrome
- Eating and sleeping disorders
55Health Consequences of ViolenceAgainst
WomenPhysical Sequelae
- Alcoholism and Drug Abuse
- e.g. rape victims 10x prevalence of general
population - begins after abuse
- Tobacco abuse
- High risk sexual behaviors, STDs, recurrent
vaginal yeast infections - Delayed risk of HTN, arthritis, asthma, stroke,
and heart disease - IBS
- symptom severity correlates with severity and
duration of abuse
56Health Consequences of ViolenceAgainst
WomenPsychological Sequelae - Early
- shock
- denial
- distrust of others
- withdrawal
- confusion
- psychological numbing
- sense of vulnerability/hopelessness/loss/betrayal
57 Health Consequences of ViolenceAgainst
WomenPsychological Sequelae - Long Term
- depression
- anxiety disorders
- phobias
- anorexia/bulimia
- substance abuse
58Health Consequences of ViolenceAgainst
WomenPsychological Sequelae - Long Term
- PMDD
- PTSD (nightmares/hypervigilance/etc.)
- Fivefold increased risk of developing a
psychiatric disorder - 10 of domestic violence victims attempt suicide
- possible recurrence of symptoms in later, healthy
relationships
59Health Consequences of ViolenceAgainst Women
- Interference with health care
- Delayed health care
60Health Consequences of ViolenceAgainst
WomenResponse to Rape
- Initial
- unnaturally calm/detached OR crying/angry
- Denial phase
- approx. 2 months
- Increasing psychological symptoms over several
months - Gradual psychological healing
61Recognition and Management ofDomestic Violence
- Routine, repeated assessments in all settings
(ER, clinic, wards) - Maintain supportive, nonjudgmental attitude
avoid victim-blaming - Validate the womans experiences, building on her
strengths, transfer power and control to her - Be available, provide frequent followup
- Involve social work
62Recognition and Management
- Discover nature and duration of abuse
- Assess for child abuse
- ensure childrens safety/mandated reporting
- Keep detailed records, including photographs
- Testify in court prn
- Do not recommend marriage counseling
63Public Health Approaches to Violence Against Women
- Restraining orders prevent recurrent abuse
- Batterer treatment programs have had mixed, but
generally negative, results
64Public Health Approaches to Violence Against
Women Alcohol
- Evidence-based prevention of familial violence
- Increased excise taxes on alcohol
- Restricting physical access to alcoholic
beverages - Screening and brief intervention for alcohol abuse
65Screening Practices of PCPs
- Self-assessment (1999)
- routine screening - 79
- first visit - 10
- periodic checkups - 99
- prenatal care - 11
66Screening Practices of PCPs
- Screening new patients
- OB/Gyns - 17
- Internists - 6
- Physicians practicing in HMOs - 1
- Physicians practicing in public clinics - 37
- no difference by sex
67Assess Patient for Acutely Increased Danger
- Abuser
- criminal record
- alcohol/substance abuse problem
- gambling problem
- psychiatric disorder
- Situational Trigger
- job loss
- death in family
68Assess for Acutely Increased Danger
- Nature of Abuse
- increased severity and frequency of beatings
- escalation in threats
- stalking
- violent or forced sex
- destruction of property
69Ensure Victims Safety
- Social worker involvement
- Restraining order
- Phone numbers of shelters, hotlines
- Safe place to go
70Domestic Violence Shelters
- Availability poor
- up to 70 - 80 of women and 80 of children
turned away on any given night - Woefully underfunded
- Average length of stay 14 days most allow 30
day max stay - Over 50 of all homeless women and children are
fleeing domestic violence
71Physician Failure to RecognizeViolence Against
Women
- Fear of offending
- feelings of powerlessness
- time constraints
- Pandoras Box
- low confidence in ability to affect change
- sense of own vulnerability
- deficits in education and training
72Physician Failure to RecognizeViolence Against
Women
- Doctors underestimate the prevalence of domestic
violence in their patients/communities - similar to teen sexual activity
- Female MDs may be better than male MDs in
detecting domestic violence and in taking a more
thorough history
73Violence Against Womenin The Developing World
- verbal, physical, and sexual abuse
- 4 witnesses required for rape conviction in
Pakistan - dowry-related murder
- bride-burning
74Violence Against Womenin The Developing World
- forced abortion and sterilization
- divorce restrictions
- forced prostitution
- child prostitution
75Violence Against Womenin The Developing World
- Selective abortion, malnutrition or killing of
female children - MF ratio of births in China 119/100
- suicide as vengeance against an abusive spouse
- post-rape suicide (or homicide)
- to cleanse family honor
- 47 of homicides in Alexandria, Egypt
76Female Genital Mutilation
- Not female circumcision
- i.e., male equivalent would be penectomy
- Ranges from clitoridectomy to total infibulation
(removal of clitoris and labia minora, stitching
labia majora together, and leaving a small
opening posterior for urine and menstral blood) - surgical chastity belt
77Female Genital Mutilation
- 100 million women affected worldwide (2 million
girls/year) - mostly in Africa (e.g. 98 of women in Somalia,
80 in Egypt, 50 in Kenya) - Outlawed in Egypt - 2007
- rare in Asia
- Found across all socioeconomic strata and in all
major religions
78Female Genital Mutilation
- Formerly used in U.S. and U.K. as treatment for
hysteria (floating womb), epilepsy,
melancholia, lesbianism, and excessive
masturbation - Represents cultural control of womens sexual
pleasure and reproductive capabilities - c.f. virginity exams by physicians in Turkey
79Female Genital Mutilation
- Type I - removal of clitoris
- Type II - removal of clitoris and part of labia
minora - Type III - modified infibulation - 2/3 of labia
majora sewn together - Type IV - total infibulation
80Female Genital Mutilation
- Most commonly carried out between ages 4 and 10
- physicians perform about 12 of operations
- Often done under non-sterile conditions and
without anesthesia
81Female Genital MutilationComplications/Sequelae
- bleeding
- infection
- dysparevnia
- painful neuromas
- keloids
- dysmenorrhea
- infertility
- decreased sexual responsiveness
- shame
- fear
- depression
82Management of Female Genital Mutilation
- Sensitivity/understand cultural identity issues
- Deinfibulation
- Immigration Issues
83Female Genital Mutilation
- UN, WHO, and FIGO have condemned
- Illegal to perform in U.S. under child abuse
statutes - called cultural imperialism by some, although
we have also outlawed other cultural practices - slavery
- polygamy
- child labor
- denial of appropriate, life-saving medical care
to sick children
84Polygamy
- Utah/Mormons
- introduced by Joseph Smith (1805-1844) who had 50
wives - theological justification based on Abrahams wife
Rachel giving him her servant Hagar as a sister
wife (Genesis) - Est. 30,000 people in multi-wife families one
generation ago - Est. 60,000 - 90,000 today
- polygamist clans (e.g. the 1,500 member Kingston
clan)
85Polygamy
- Utah outlawed plural marriage in 1890 in
exchange for statehood - Not one prosecution in the last 50 years
- Former EPA Administrator (and former Utah
governor) Mike Leavitt (a Mormon descended from a
polygamous family) declared constitutional under
the U.S. Constitution freedom of speech/religion
guarantee (it is not)
86PolygamyRelated Offenses
- welfare fraud by sister wives claiming single
motherhood - lapses in medication attention (including lack of
prenatal care) - incest and underage sex
- girls age 10 forced into marriage
- women existing in limbo
- no birth certificates, drivers licenses, or
voter registration
87Covenant Marriages
- Can be dissolved only in the case of infidelity,
abuse or felony conviction - Offered since 1997 in Louisiana and Arkansas
- similar measures introduced in 17 other states
88Rape in War
- Used for domination, humiliation, control,
soldierly bonding, and ethnic cleansing - often occurs in front of family members
- recognized as a War Crime since Nuremberg
89International IssuesAfghanistan
- Taliban militia took over in 1996
- Human rights abuses
- gender-based violence
- women denied access to education and health care
- female employment rate decreased from 62 to 12
- Maternal mortality among worlds highest
- Lowest ranking on U.N. Development and Gender
Disparity Indices
90International IssuesSouth Africas Rape Epidemic
- Official Rape Rate 104/100,000 people (vs.
34.4/100,000 in the U.S.) - highest rate in the world
- Official annual total 50,000, but est. only
1/35 reported - New latex vaginal insert that latches onto a
rapists penis and requires surgical removal
available for 35
91International IssuesSouth Africas Rape Epidemic
- HIV risk
- in Johannesburg, 40 of men aged 20 - 29 are HIV
- post-rape antiretroviral drugs are not available
in government hospitals
92Other International Issues
- 80 of refugees and internally-displaced persons
worldwide are female - Mexico City (the most heavily populated city in
the world) has one shelter for battered women - Wives of the gods
- sex slaves at animist shrine in Ghana, Benin and
Togo
93Trafficking
- Tens of thousands of women and girls trafficked
into US annually to work in sweatshops - Others pay for transport to US, end up in
Northern Marianas Islands - International sex trade, sex tourism strong
94Legal approaches
- Mandatory reporting
- History of mandatory reporting (child and elder
abuse) - Benefits
- Risks
- Effectiveness
- International Violence Against Women Act
- Would require US government to prevent and
respond to violence against women and girls as a
part of US foreign policy and aid programs - Stalled in Congress
95Conclusions
- Awareness of scope of problem of violence against
women - Screen regularly and repeatedly document treat
support - Support womens rights issues, which are health
care issues
96References
- Donohoe MT. Violence against women Partner abuse
and sexual assault. Hospital Physician
200440(10)24-31. - Donohoe MT. Individual and societal forms of
violence against women in the United States and
the developing world an overview. Curr Womens
Hlth Reports 20022(5)313-319.
97References
- Donohoe MT. Violence and human rights abuses
against women in the developing world. Medscape
Ob/Gyn and Womens Health 20038(2) posted
11/26/03. http//www.medscape.com/viewarticle/4642
55 - Donohoe MT. Violence against women in the
military. Medscape Ob/Gyn and Womens Health
200510(2) posted 9/13/05. Available at
http//www.medscape.com/viewarticle/512380
98References
- Donohoe MT. War, rape and genocide Never again?
Medscape Ob/Gyn and Womens Health 20049(2)
posted 10/22/04. http//www.medscape.com/viewartic
le/491147
99Contact Information
- Public Health and Social Justice Website
- http//www.phsj.org
- martindonohoe_at_phsj.org