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Armed Conflict, Intimate Partner Violence, and Mental Distress of Women in Northeastern Uganda: A Mixed Methods Study
Author(s) -
Mootz Jennifer J.,
Muhanguzi Florence,
Greenfield Brenna,
Gill Meghan,
Gonzalez Miigis B.,
Panko Pavel,
Mangen Patrick Onyango,
Wainberg Milton L.,
Khoshnood Kaveh
Publication year - 2019
Publication title -
psychology of women quarterly
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.416
H-Index - 93
eISSN - 1471-6402
pISSN - 0361-6843
DOI - 10.1177/0361684319864366
Subject(s) - mental health , domestic violence , psychological intervention , psychology , neglect , suicide prevention , clinical psychology , poison control , socioeconomic status , psychiatry , global mental health , occupational safety and health , medicine , environmental health , population , pathology
As global mental health research and programming proliferate, research that prioritizes women's voices and examines marginalized women's mental health outcomes in relation to exposure to violence at community and relational levels of the socioecological model is needed. In a mixed methods, transnational study, we examined armed conflict exposure, intimate partner violence (IPV), and depressive symptoms among 605 women in Northeastern Uganda. We used analysis of variance to test between groups of women who had experienced no IPV or armed conflict, IPV only, armed conflict only, and both; and linear regression to predict depressive symptoms. We used rapid ethnographic methods with a subsample ( n = 21) to identify problem prioritization; and, to characterize women's mental health experiences, we conducted follow up in-depth interviews ( n = 15), which we analyzed with grounded theory methods. Thirty percent of the sample met the cut-off for probable major depressive disorder; women exposed to both IPV and armed conflict had significantly higher rates of depression than all other groups. While women attributed psychological symptoms primarily to IPV exposure, both past-year IPV and exposure to armed conflict were significantly associated with depressive symptoms. Women identified socioeconomic neglect as having the most impact and described three interrelated mental health experiences that contribute to thoughts of escape, including escape through suicide. Policy efforts should be interprofessional, and specialists should collaborate to advance multi-pronged interventions and gender-informed implementation strategies for women's wellbeing.

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