Intimate partner violence and constraints to reproductive autonomy and reproductive health among women seeking abortion services in Bangladesh
Dublin Core
Title
Intimate partner violence and constraints to reproductive autonomy and reproductive health among women seeking abortion services in Bangladesh
Author
Pearson, Erin
Andersen, Kathryn L.
Biswas, Kamal
Chowdhury, Rezwana
Sherman, Susan G.
Decker, Michele R.
Andersen, Kathryn L.
Biswas, Kamal
Chowdhury, Rezwana
Sherman, Susan G.
Decker, Michele R.
Publisher
2017/03/00
Language
English
Publication Date
20170300
Abstract
Objective: To understand intersections between intimate partner violence (IPV) and other constraints to women's reproductive autonomy, and the influence of IPV on reproductive health. Methods: A secondary analysis examined cross-sectional data from a facility-based sample of women seeking abortion care (for spontaneous or induced abortion) between March 1 and October 31, 2013. Women aged 18-49 years, who received abortion services and selected a short-acting contraceptive method or no contraception completed an interviewer-administered survey after treatment. Adjusted prevalence ratios (aPRs) were calculated for associations between IPV experience and potential constraints to reproductive autonomy and health outcomes. Results: There were 457 participants included in the present analysis and 118 (25.8%) had experienced IPV in the preceding year. IPV was associated with discordance in fertility intentions with husbands/partners and in-laws, with in-law opposition to contraception, with perceived religious prohibition of contraception, and with presenting unaccompanied (all P<0.05). IPV was also associated with receiving post-abortion care after an induced abortion compared with accessing legal menstrual regulation, and with the use of medication abortion compared with manual vacuum aspiration (both P<0.05). Conclusion: Intimate partner violence was associated with additional constraints on reproductive autonomy from husbands/partners, in-laws, and religious communities. Seeking induced abortion unaccompanied and using medication abortion could be strategies to access abortion covertly among women experiencing IPV. Ensuring women's reproductive freedom requires addressing IPV and related constraints.
Primary Classification
12.1
Secondary Classification
12.1;9.5.5
Primary keywords
abortion--[pri];autonomy--[pri];domestic violence--[pri]
Secondary keywords
contraception;marital relations;reproduction;women's health;women's health services
Journal Article
International journal of Gynaecology and Obstetrics2017 March; 136(3):290-297
Link for Internet access
Note
Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0). Copyright © 2016 The Authors.
Call Number
citation
Bibliography
24 refs
ISSN
00207292 (print);18793479 (online)
Collection
Citation
“Intimate partner violence and constraints to reproductive autonomy and reproductive health among women seeking abortion services in Bangladesh,” Islamic Medical & Scientific Ethics, accessed January 16, 2025, https://imse.ibp.georgetown.domains/items/show/37740.