Violence Related to Daily Water and Sanitation Needs in South Africa

Author:

Jayaweera Ruvani T.1,Goin Dana E.2,Twine Rhian3,Neilands Torsten B.2,Wagner Ryan G.3,Lippman Sheri A.23,Kahn Kathleen3,Pettifor Audrey34,Ahern Jennifer5

Affiliation:

1. Ibis Reproductive Health, Oakland, California;

2. University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, California;

3. University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, South Africa;

4. University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill, North Carolina;

5. University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, California

Abstract

ABSTRACT. There is a critical lack of research on violence experienced by women when meeting their daily water and sanitation needs. This short report describes the cumulative lifetime incidence of exposure to violence when using the toilet or collecting water (water, sanitation, and hygiene [WASH]-related violence) and identifies associated health and behavioral risks. Data from 1,870 participants collected in 2013–2015 from a longitudinal cohort of young women in rural South Africa were included in this analysis. We found that exposure to WASH-related violence was high: 25.9% experienced violence when collecting water or when using the toilet. Those who experienced violence were more likely to report pregnancy, an older partner, unprotected sex, experience of intimate partner violence, engaging in transactional sex, depressive symptoms, and anxiety. Future research should investigate the location and type of violence experienced and examine how WASH-related violence is related to health outcomes to identify gender-centered WASH interventions that reduce violence exposure.

Publisher

American Society of Tropical Medicine and Hygiene

Subject

Virology,Infectious Diseases,Parasitology

Reference13 articles.

1. Gender violence as a water, sanitation, and hygiene risk: uncovering violence against women and girls as it pertains to poor WaSH access;Pommells,2018

2. Violence, gender and WASH: spurring action on a complex, under-documented and sensitive topic;Sommer,2015

3. Non-partner sexual violence experience and toilet type amongst young (18–24) women in South Africa: a population-based cross-sectional analysis;Gibbs,2021

4. Household sanitation facilities and women’s risk of non-partner sexual violence in India;Jadhav,2016

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