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Editorials

Violence against women during covid-19 pandemic restrictions

BMJ 2020; 369 doi: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.m1712 (Published 07 May 2020) Cite this as: BMJ 2020;369:m1712

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  1. Elisabeth Roesch, consultant1,
  2. Avni Amin, technical officer1,
  3. Jhumka Gupta, associate professor2 ,
  4. Claudia García-Moreno, acting unit head1
  1. 1Department of Sexual and Reproductive Health, World Health Organization, Geneva, Switzerland
  2. 2Department of Global and Community Health, College of Health and Human Services, George Mason University, Fairfax, VA, USA
  1. Correspondence to: C García-Moreno garciamorenoc{at}who.int

Protections for women and girls must be built into response plans

As the covid-19 pandemic intensifies, its gendered effects have begun to gain attention. Though data are scarce, media coverage and reports from organisations that respond to violence against women reveal an alarming picture of increased reports of intimate partner violence during this outbreak, including partners using physical distancing measures to further isolate affected women from resources.12 In Jianli County, Hubei province of China, a police department reported a tripling of domestic violence cases in February 2020 compared with February 2019, estimating that 90% were related to the covid-19 epidemic.3 In the UK, a project tracking violence against women noted that deaths from domestic abuse between 23 March and 12 April had more than doubled (to 16 deaths) compared with the average rate in the previous 10 years.4

These reports are disturbing yet predictable. Globally, 30% of women experience physical or sexual violence by an intimate partner in their lifetime.5 Such violence can increase during humanitarian crises, including conflict and natural disasters.6 The gendered impacts of infectious disease epidemics are less understood and acknowledged.

Past epidemics, including Ebola7 and Zika,8 suggest violence against women may shift in nature and scale as outbreaks affect social and economic life.9 Half of the world’s population is being asked to stay at home to slow the spread of covid-19.10 For women already in abusive relationships, or at risk of such abuse, staying at home increases their risk of intimate partner violence. Children may also be exposed to intimate partner violence or be abused themselves.11 Urgent steps must be taken to address the risks of violence faced by women and children during pandemic restrictions.

Pathways of risk

Household stress can increase the likelihood of intimate partner violence.12 As people stay at home, families spend more time in close contact, including in cramped conditions. Simultaneously, the disruption of livelihoods and the ability to earn a living reduces access to basic needs and services, causing additional stress. Perpetrators of partner violence may also restrict access to money or health related items such as hand sanitiser, soap, medications, and access to health services.

The disruption of social and protective networks may further exacerbate intimate partner violence and its consequences. Women may have less contact with family and friends who provide support and protection from violence by a partner. Perpetrators may further restrict access to services, help, and psychosocial support from formal and informal networks.

As health and other support services, including sexual and reproductive health services, are scaled back, women subjected to violence may have less opportunity for receiving support and referrals from the health sector. Other essential support services such as hotlines, crisis centres, shelters, legal aid, and protection and counselling services may also be scaled back, further reducing access to help for women in abusive relationships.

How to respond

Although the health system is under enormous burden as covid-19 stretches the capacity of hospitals and clinics, the health sector can take steps to mitigate the risk of violence against women during the pandemic restrictions and help reduce its effects (box 1). Governments must include essential services to deal with violence against women in covid-19 response plans, resource them, and identify strategies to make them accessible during physical distancing measures. Health facilities should identify locally available support services for survivors (such as hotlines, shelters, rape crisis centres, counselling) and refer women when they seek health services.

Box 1

Resources on violence against women

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Health providers should be aware of the risks and consequences of violence against women and provide those affected with support and relevant medical treatment.13 It is important to ensure the maintenance of essential medical services, such as for post-rape care, including availability of the necessary medicines and other supplies. Older women, women with disabilities, women living in humanitarian crises contexts, poor women living in crowded conditions, and ethnic minorities may be disproportionately affected and have additional needs. The use of mobile health and telemedicine to safely support those experiencing violence against women must be explored urgently, as well as other means to reach women in settings where access to mobile phones or the internet is limited or lacking.14

Importantly, the world’s most vulnerable populations will be affected as this pandemic reaches countries with high levels of poverty, displacement, and conflict. Humanitarian organisations need to make services available for women experiencing violence and collect data on reported cases.

We must learn lessons from past epidemics about the failures to recognise and address gender related effects of outbreaks. As the global health community grapples with how best to halt the spread of covid-19, the ongoing epidemic of violence against women cannot be ignored.

Footnotes

  • Competing interests:We have read and understood BMJ policy on declaration of interests and have no interests to declare. The authors are employed by WHO. The views are those of the authors and do not represent WHO policy.

  • Provenance and peer review: Not commissioned; externally peer reviewed.

This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution IGO License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/3.0/igo/), which permits use, distribution, and reproduction for non-commercial purposes in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.

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