Domestic violence in Medellín and other municipalities of Aburrá Valley 2003-2004

Objective: To estimate the magnitude and distribution by sex of domestic or family violence (between partners, siblings, and from parents to children) in Medellin, Colombia and nine surrounding municipalities (Medellin metropolitan area), 2003-2004. Methods: Household survey to a representative mul...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Nilton E. Montoya, Luis F. Duque
Format: Article
Language:Spanish
Published: Universidad de Antioquia 2008-01-01
Series:Revista Facultad Nacional de Salud Pública
Subjects:
Online Access:http://aprendeenlinea.udea.edu.co/revistas/index.php/fnsp/article/view/64/84
id doaj-90a2cc0806254f8caa2b5be54070c0f3
record_format Article
spelling doaj-90a2cc0806254f8caa2b5be54070c0f32020-11-25T03:46:41ZspaUniversidad de AntioquiaRevista Facultad Nacional de Salud Pública0120-386X2008-01-012612739Domestic violence in Medellín and other municipalities of Aburrá Valley 2003-2004Nilton E. MontoyaLuis F. DuqueObjective: To estimate the magnitude and distribution by sex of domestic or family violence (between partners, siblings, and from parents to children) in Medellin, Colombia and nine surrounding municipalities (Medellin metropolitan area), 2003-2004. Methods: Household survey to a representative multistage sample to non institutionalized population, within 12 and 60 years of age, in the urban area of each municipality. Results: Verbal or psychological aggression and victimization: 64% and 61%, physical violence without physical injury: 17% and 14%, physical violence with physical injury: 2% and 3% between intimate partners. Intimate partners’ aggression and victimization do no differentiate by sex. Verbal, psychological and physical aggression from parents toward children is 60%, and physical aggression with physical injury is near 10%. 55% of families reported fights among siblings, and 3% with physical injury. Medellin has the highest rates of family or domestic violence compared with the other municipalities of Aburra Valley. Domestic violence charge is very low (5-20%), and masculine victims rather prefer not to report. Conclusions: We suggest not to ground public policies on current statistics, but to establish a system of periodic surveys, representative of general population or families. It seems important to have two different types of interventions: domestic or family violence prevention considering family as a unit that interacts with the surrounding; and rehabilitation of chronic and severe domestic aggressors.http://aprendeenlinea.udea.edu.co/revistas/index.php/fnsp/article/view/64/84Domestic violencechild abusespouse abuseviolence against womensibling relationsColombia
collection DOAJ
language Spanish
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nilton E. Montoya
Luis F. Duque
spellingShingle Nilton E. Montoya
Luis F. Duque
Domestic violence in Medellín and other municipalities of Aburrá Valley 2003-2004
Revista Facultad Nacional de Salud Pública
Domestic violence
child abuse
spouse abuse
violence against women
sibling relations
Colombia
author_facet Nilton E. Montoya
Luis F. Duque
author_sort Nilton E. Montoya
title Domestic violence in Medellín and other municipalities of Aburrá Valley 2003-2004
title_short Domestic violence in Medellín and other municipalities of Aburrá Valley 2003-2004
title_full Domestic violence in Medellín and other municipalities of Aburrá Valley 2003-2004
title_fullStr Domestic violence in Medellín and other municipalities of Aburrá Valley 2003-2004
title_full_unstemmed Domestic violence in Medellín and other municipalities of Aburrá Valley 2003-2004
title_sort domestic violence in medellín and other municipalities of aburrá valley 2003-2004
publisher Universidad de Antioquia
series Revista Facultad Nacional de Salud Pública
issn 0120-386X
publishDate 2008-01-01
description Objective: To estimate the magnitude and distribution by sex of domestic or family violence (between partners, siblings, and from parents to children) in Medellin, Colombia and nine surrounding municipalities (Medellin metropolitan area), 2003-2004. Methods: Household survey to a representative multistage sample to non institutionalized population, within 12 and 60 years of age, in the urban area of each municipality. Results: Verbal or psychological aggression and victimization: 64% and 61%, physical violence without physical injury: 17% and 14%, physical violence with physical injury: 2% and 3% between intimate partners. Intimate partners’ aggression and victimization do no differentiate by sex. Verbal, psychological and physical aggression from parents toward children is 60%, and physical aggression with physical injury is near 10%. 55% of families reported fights among siblings, and 3% with physical injury. Medellin has the highest rates of family or domestic violence compared with the other municipalities of Aburra Valley. Domestic violence charge is very low (5-20%), and masculine victims rather prefer not to report. Conclusions: We suggest not to ground public policies on current statistics, but to establish a system of periodic surveys, representative of general population or families. It seems important to have two different types of interventions: domestic or family violence prevention considering family as a unit that interacts with the surrounding; and rehabilitation of chronic and severe domestic aggressors.
topic Domestic violence
child abuse
spouse abuse
violence against women
sibling relations
Colombia
url http://aprendeenlinea.udea.edu.co/revistas/index.php/fnsp/article/view/64/84
work_keys_str_mv AT niltonemontoya domesticviolenceinmedellinandothermunicipalitiesofaburravalley20032004
AT luisfduque domesticviolenceinmedellinandothermunicipalitiesofaburravalley20032004
_version_ 1724504871961362432