BMC Public Health

official impact factor 2.36

Open Access Research article

2The role of controlling behaviour in intimate partner violence and its health effects: a population based study from rural Vietnam

Gunilla Krantz1,3* and Nguyen D Vung2,3

Author Affiliations

1 Department of Community Medicine and Public Health, the Sahlgrenska Academy at the University of Gothenburg, Göteborg, Sweden

2 Department of Demography, Faculty of Public Health, Hanoi Medical University, Hanoi, Vietnam

3 Division of International Health, Ihcar, Department of Public Health Sciences, Karolinska Institutet, Stockholm, Sweden

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BMC Public Health 2009, 9:143 doi:10.1186/1471-2458-9-143

Published: 14 May 2009

Abstract

Background

Studies in North America and other high-income regions support the distinction between extreme "intimate terrorism" and occasional "situational couple violence", defined conceptually in terms of the presence or absence of controlling behaviour in the violent member of the couple. Relatively little research has been conducted on the different forms intimate partner violence may take in low-income countries. The aim of this study was to investigate whether these expressions of intimate partner violence in one low-income country, Vietnam, adhere to patterns observed in western industrialised countries as well as to investigate the resulting health effects.

Methods

This cross-sectional study collected structured interview data from 883 married women aged 17–60, using the Women's Health and Life Experiences questionnaire developed by WHO. Intimate partner violence was assessed by past-year experience of physical or sexual violence and control tactics were assessed using six items combined into a scale. Three different health parameters constituted the dependent variables. Bi- and multivariate analyses, including effect modification analyses, were performed.

Results

Of the participants, 81 (9.2%) had been exposed to physical or sexual violence during the past 12 months; of these, 26 (32.1%) had been subjected to one or more controlling behaviours by their partners. The risk of ill health associated with combined exposure was elevated eight to 15 times, compared to a two-fourfold risk increase after exposure to only one of the behaviours, i.e. violent acts or control tactics.

Conclusion

Physical or sexual violence combined with control tactics acted synergistically to worsen health in rural Vietnamese women. The occurrence of such violence calls for altered policies, increased research and implementation of preventive and curative strategies. The unacceptability of intimate partner violence as a part of normal Vietnamese family life must be recognised in the general debate.