4.4 Article

Typologies of violence against women in Brazil: A latent class analysis of how violence and HIV intersect

Journal

GLOBAL PUBLIC HEALTH
Volume 15, Issue 11, Pages 1639-1654

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/17441692.2020.1767675

Keywords

HIV; violence; gender; Brazil; latent class analysis

Funding

  1. World Bank/Sexual Violence Research Initiative (SVRI) Development Marketplace for Innovation in Prevention of Gender-Based Violence
  2. National Scientific and Technological Development Council (CNPq) in Porto Alegre [478174/2009-8, MCT/CNPq 14/2009]
  3. SP Fapesp [2012/25239-3]
  4. CNPq [580, 471892/2011-4, 478296/2012-6]
  5. United Nations Fund for Population Activities Pan American Health Organization [BR/LOA/1200041.001/002]
  6. NIDA [T32 DA023356]
  7. NICHD [R01 HD077891-04S1]
  8. NIAAA [K01AA025009]

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We address the limited understanding around the overlap between violence and HIV in Brazil. Data was from two clinic-based samples of HIV-positive (n = 1534) and HIV-negative women (n = 1589) in Sao Paulo and Porto Alegre. We conducted latent class analysis and identified violence typologies by type of violence, life course timing, frequency, and perpetrator, stratified by city and HIV-status. Overall, HIV-positive women experienced more lifetime physical and sexual violence than HIV-negative women. Twelve unique violence latent classes were identified. In Sao Paulo, HIV-positive women were likely to have endured physical violence several times (Conditional Probability [CP]: 0.80) by an intimate partner (CP: 0.85), and sexual violence several times (CP: 0.46) by an intimate partner (CP: 0.62). In Porto Alegre, HIV-positive women endured physical violence several times (CP: 0.80) by an intimate partner (CP: 0.70) during childhood/adolescence (CP: 0.48), and sexual violence several times (CP: 0.54) by an intimate partner (CP: 0.60). Findings inform interventions to educate around gender equity, violence, and the health effects of violence including HIV, integrate HIV and violence services, and improve the provision of bio-medical HIV prevention among HIV-negative women who experience violence.

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