By Serena Gordon
HealthDay Reporter
TUESDAY,
Aug. 2, 2011 (HealthDay News) -- Women who've suffered from gender-based
violence are more likely to develop anxiety disorders or other mental
woes, experience physical and mental disabilities, and have worse
quality of life than other women, new research shows.
Gender-based violence includes rape and other forms of sexual
assault, intimate-partner violence (such as spouse abuse) and stalking.
Risks
for these long-term problems rose with the intensity of abuse. For
example, women who'd experienced three or four types of gender-based
violence had 10 times the odds of developing an anxiety disorder than
women who haven't experienced such violence, the study found. The odds
of a woman who'd been subjected to such violence developing a substance
abuse problem were almost six times higher than for a woman who hasn't
experienced gender-based violence.
"Gender-based violence is a
public health problem and occurs to many women. Women need to recognize
that the social and psychological problems they are experiencing may be
related to their past or current exposure to violence and not pass these
reactions off to other causes," said the study's lead author, Susan
Rees, a senior research fellow at the University of New South Wales in
Sydney, Australia.
Results of the study are published in the Aug. 3 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association.
In
the United States, more than 20 percent of women have experienced
intimate-partner violence, stalking or both. A full 17 percent have
reported rape or attempted rape, according to background information in
the study.
The data for Rees' study came from a national survey
done in Australia on mental health and well-being. The survey included
over 4,400 women between the ages of 16 and 85 years old.
In that
group, 1,218 women (27 percent) reported experiencing at least one form
of gender-based violence, while 139 had been exposed to three or more
forms of gender-based violence.
The average age that women were
first raped was 13 years old and 12 years old for sexual assault. The
average age that women were beaten by a partner or stalked was 22 years
old.
The more violence a woman was exposed to, the greater her risk of developing mental illnesses, according to the study.
For
example, about 15 percent of women who had been subjected to one form
of gender-based violence experienced post-traumatic stress disorder
(PTSD). But, if women were subjected to three or more forms of
gender-based violence, that number jumped to more than 56 percent, the
investigators found.
Suicide rates were significantly higher for
women who'd experienced gender-based violence. The average rate of
attempted suicide was 1.6 percent for all women in the study, but it was
6.6 percent for women who'd experienced one form of violence, and 34.7
percent for women exposed to three or more types of violence.
Rates
of physical and mental disabilities were also much higher for women who
had experienced gender-based violence. These women also tended to
report an impaired quality of life.
Even though the study team
had expected the findings, "the extent and strength of the associations
we found was surprising and very concerning," Rees said.
Furthermore, this type of aggression
"often occurs repeatedly, unlike other traumas such as exposure to
natural disasters, so you get a compounding effect. Gender-based
violence is unfortunately still largely considered a personal and
private matter, making help-seeking very difficult for many women, so
they rarely received the support trauma survivors need to assist
recovery," Rees noted.
One U.S. expert said the findings need to be heeded closely.
"This
study really demonstrated the extent of gender-based violence and the
long-term consequences of violence against women," said Andrea Gielen,
director of the Center for Injury Research and Policy at the Johns
Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health in Baltimore. "There are huge
implications for health services; this is not just a one-time treatment
in the ER for a broken bone. People who treat women for any
health-related issues need to think about the extent that such violence
can affect women," Gielen said.
Gielen added that in the United States, a measure of help is on the
way. The federal government on Monday adopted recommendations from the
Institute of Medicine on preventive services for women's health, and one
new rule is that health care insurers must cover the cost of screening
and counseling for domestic violence.
"Any woman is who
experiencing gender-based violence needs to realize that there are
things she can do, there are hotlines she can call, there are resources
available," Gielen said. "Talking about the experience with an informed
and supportive health professional is a good thing to do to move on."
More information
The U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Office on Women's Health has advice on how to help a friend who's being abused.
Copyright © 2011 HealthDay. All rights reserved.
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