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Intimate partner violence and sexually transmitted disease symptoms in a national sample of married Bangladeshi women

Author Affiliations
Boston University, Harvard University, University of California Davis Medical Center, Yale University
Published InInternational Journal of Gynecology & Obstetrics
Year2007
Citations60

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To assess associations of intimate partner violence (IPV) with women's sexually transmitted disease (STD) symptoms, and to clarify biological and behavioral mechanisms underpinning heightened STD rates among abused women. METHODS: A cross-sectional investigation of married couples (n=2865) sampled via the Bangladesh Demographic Health Survey. RESULTS: Over one third (38%) of married Bangladeshi women experienced physical or sexual IPV in the 12 months preceding the survey. Victimization was bivariately associated with vaginal irritation/discharge, pelvic pain during intercourse, genital sores/ulcers, and vaginal discharge with odor (OR 1.39-2.09). IPV demonstrated an independent effect on vaginal irritation with discharge (adjusted OR 1.34) and vaginal discharge with odor (adjusted OR 2.08) after accounting for STD exposure (i.e., husbands' recent STD). CONCLUSIONS: IPV elevates married…
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