AI Article Synopsis

  • Women in Tanzania face high rates of intimate partner violence (IPV), prompting a trial to test prevention interventions aimed at men and communities in nine villages.
  • The study involved 450 couples divided into three groups: Control (women in savings groups only), Intervention Group 1 (women in savings plus men in gender-focused peer groups), and Intervention Group 2 (women in savings, men in peer groups, plus community leader dialogues).
  • Results showed high participant retention and engagement, with men in the intervention groups more likely to reject wife-beating and report not committing IPV, suggesting that more extensive trials could lead to effective IPV prevention strategies.

Article Abstract

In Tanzania, women suffer high rates of intimate partner violence (IPV). We conducted a pilot cluster randomised controlled trial to test the feasibility, acceptability and preliminary effectiveness of IPV prevention interventions targeting men and communities in nine villages randomly assigned to one of three study arms ( = 450 couples). In the Control Group, women participated in savings groups while male partners received no intervention. In Intervention Group 1, women participated in savings groups and men participated in peer-groups addressing gender relations and IPV prevention. In Intervention Group 2, women participated in savings groups, men participated in peer-groups, and community leaders facilitated dialogues on similar topics. Recruitment was completed within one month with 95% retained in the intervention and 81% retained in the endline survey. Acceptability was high, with men participating in 82% of peer-group session hours. More men in Interventions 1 (24%) and 2 (19%) disagreed with wife-beating compared to men in the Control (13%); and more men reported non-perpetration of IPV in Interventions 1 (16%) and 2 (14%) compared to the Control (-2%). Findings suggest a fully powered RCT may detect significant reductions in men's justification and use of IPV, paving the way for evidence-based violence prevention programming. This study is registered with ClinicalTrials.gov. Identifier: NCT02434796.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/17441692.2019.1609062DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

group women
12
women participated
12
participated savings
12
savings groups
12
pilot cluster
8
controlled trial
8
preliminary effectiveness
8
intimate partner
8
partner violence
8
ipv prevention
8

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!