Sexual and domestic violence among women attending a STI/AIDS clinic in Vitória, Brazil

Authors

  • Raquel Barbosa Miranda Universidade Brasileira Multivix
  • Maria Alix Leite Araújo
  • Bettina Moulin Coelho Lima
  • Roumayne Fernandes Andrade
  • Nathalia Lima Universidade Brasileira Multivix
  • Angélica Espinosa Miranda Universidade Federal do Espírito Santo

Keywords:

sexual violence, domestic violence, sexually transmitted diseases, AIDS, women

Abstract

Introduction: Violence against women can take several forms; ranging from sexual harassment, discrimination, and discounting to even more serious forms such as those physical and sexual in nature. Objective: To describe the frequency of domestic and sexual violence reported by women attending a sexually transmitted infections (STI) clinic in Vitória, Brazil. Methods: Women attending the STI/AIDS clinic during the period of study were invited to participate and were interviewed after signing a written consent form. The assessment questionnaire included information on socio-demographic characteristics such as risk behaviors for STI and clinical, domestic, and sexual violence reports. Results: A total of 276 (96.8%) women agreed to participate, of which 109 (39.5%) were HIV-positive and 167 (60.5%) were HIV-negative. History of domestic violence was reported by 52.6% of women, mainly related to alcohol abuse (41.6%), use of illicit drugs (27.2%), and psychiatric problems (25.3%). Previous sexual violence was reported by 28.6%, and 31.6% of these cases occurred when the participants were younger than 14 years old. A total of 69.2% of women were between 18 and 34 years old; 11.2% reported frequent use of alcohol; 21% use of illicit drugs and 2.2% reported injectable drugs. Regarding the use of condoms, HIV-positive women were less afraid to ask the partner to use condoms compared with HIV-negative women (31.2% versus 41.9%, p=0.022). Conclusion: History of domestic and sexual violence was frequently reported in this study. The effects of violence to women’s physical and mental health are widely known as a serious public health problem. In addition to its importance, violence is an invisible problem in our society and we need to learn how to approach it during clinical consultation.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Author Biographies

Raquel Barbosa Miranda, Universidade Brasileira Multivix

Universidade Brasileira Multivix – Vitória (ES), Brazil.

Maria Alix Leite Araújo

Postgraduate Program in Public Health, Universidade de Fortaleza (UNIFOR) – Fortaleza (CE), Brazil.

Bettina Moulin Coelho Lima

Centro de Referência em DST/AIDS – Vitória (ES), Brazil.

Roumayne Fernandes Andrade

Postgraduate Program in Public Health, Universidade de Fortaleza (UNIFOR) – Fortaleza (CE), Brazil.

Nathalia Lima, Universidade Brasileira Multivix

Universidade Brasileira Multivix – Vitória (ES), Brazil.

Angélica Espinosa Miranda, Universidade Federal do Espírito Santo

Postgraduate Program in Infectious Diseases, Universidade Federal do Espírito Santo (UFES) – Vitória (ES), Brazil.

Published

2022-04-20

How to Cite

1.
Miranda RB, Araújo MAL, Lima BMC, Andrade RF, Lima N, Miranda AE. Sexual and domestic violence among women attending a STI/AIDS clinic in Vitória, Brazil. DST [Internet]. 2022 Apr. 20 [cited 2024 Nov. 23];28(1):16-9. Available from: https://bjstd.org/revista/article/view/747

Issue

Section

Original Article