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Prevalence and risk factors of physical violence against husbands: evidence from India

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 October 2023

Aparajita Chattopadhyay
Affiliation:
Department of Population and Development, International Institute for Population Sciences, Mumbai, India
Santosh Kumar Sharma*
Affiliation:
The George Institute for Global Health, New Delhi, India
Deepanjali Vishwakarma
Affiliation:
Senior Associate Monitoring & Evaluation, International Institute for Population Sciences, Mumbai, India
Suresh Jungari
Affiliation:
Department of Public Health & Mortality Studies, International Institute for Population Sciences, Mumbai, India
*
Corresponding author: Santosh Kumar Sharma; Email: santoshiips88@gmail.com
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Abstract

As the proportion of women being victims of spousal violence in India is higher than men, laws are usually framed to safeguard women. However, men who have experienced physical spousal violence are not unheard of. The study aims to provide the nationwide prevalence of physical violence against husbands and the risk factors for such violence, using large-scale nationally representative ‘National Family Health Survey’ (NFHS 4) data. The study used descriptive, bivariate, logistic, and multilevel regression models with a random intercept clustering within states and households to explain the physical violence against husband. Sample size for the analysis was 62,716 currently married women aged 15–49 years. Findings revealed that in most of the states of India, physical spousal violence has increased over time. Behavioural characteristics like marital control, alcoholism, and childhood experience of parental violence have a consistent and strong role in explaining the experience of physical violence across states. With age, experience of violence against husbands increases. Differences in socio-economic characteristics do not have unidirectional effect on violence experienced by husbands across regions of India. Working women who are earning cash and having access to mobile phones perpetrate more physical violence in selected regions. Education shows a gradient on such violence perpetration, indicating that only after achieving a certain level of education, chances of violence reduce. Regionally contrasting social and economic risk factors in explaining violence strengthen the argument that violence is space and culture-specific, and development alone may not resolve violence unless the system is addressing the behavioural aspects. There is a need for supporting men experiencing domestic violence within the existing system facilities. Revisiting the present domestic violence laws and programmes for inclusivity is the need of the hour.

Information

Type
Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2023. Published by Cambridge University Press
Figure 0

Figure 1. Prevalence of intimate partner violence against their husband when he was not already beating or physically hurting them ever among per 1000 currently married women aged 15–49 years during NFHS-3 and NFHS-4 by states, India.Note: NFHS 3 (2005–2006), NFHS 4 (2015–2016).

Figure 1

Table 1. Prevalence of intimate partner violence against their husband when he was not already beating or physically hurting them ever, among per 1000 currently married women aged 15–49 years, by selected characteristics, India 2015–2016

Figure 2

Table 2. Multilevel logistic regression odds ratio of physical violence against their husband when he was not already beating or physically hurting them ever among currently married women age 15–49, India 2015–2016

Figure 3

Figure 2. Variance partition coefficient of physical violence against their husband when he was not already beating or physically hurting them ever and in the past 12 months among current married women aged 15–49 years.

Supplementary material: File

Chattopadhyay et al. supplementary material

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