Child marriage among Somali refugees in Ethiopia: a cross sectional survey of adolescent girls and adult women

Abstract Background Despite child marriage receiving increased attention over the past two decades, research on child marriage in humanitarian settings remains scarce. This study sought to quantify child marriage among Somali adolescent girls residing in Kobe refugee camp in Ethiopia and to identify...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Shatha Elnakib, Kara Hunersen, Janna Metzler, Hailu Bekele, W. Courtland Robinson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2021-06-01
Series:BMC Public Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-021-11080-5
id doaj-95f1ca00c1fd41c5a2bcafe8103679c8
record_format Article
spelling doaj-95f1ca00c1fd41c5a2bcafe8103679c82021-06-06T11:04:55ZengBMCBMC Public Health1471-24582021-06-0121111210.1186/s12889-021-11080-5Child marriage among Somali refugees in Ethiopia: a cross sectional survey of adolescent girls and adult womenShatha Elnakib0Kara Hunersen1Janna Metzler2Hailu Bekele3W. Courtland Robinson4Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public HealthJohns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public HealthWomen’s Refugee CommissionInternational Medical CorpsJohns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public HealthAbstract Background Despite child marriage receiving increased attention over the past two decades, research on child marriage in humanitarian settings remains scarce. This study sought to quantify child marriage among Somali adolescent girls residing in Kobe refugee camp in Ethiopia and to identify its correlates and consequences. Methods A cross-sectional survey was conducted using multi-stage cluster-based sampling with probability proportional to size. We randomly sampled households that have at least one female aged 15–49 and at least one adolescent female aged 10–19. In addition to calculating the proportion of girls married under age 18, we used survival methods – namely Kaplan Meier graphs and Cox proportional hazard models – to identify risk factors associated with child marriage in this context. We also used descriptive statistics to describe marital age preferences among female adults and presented measures of important sexual and reproductive health indicators among married adolescent girls. Results A total of 603 adult women were surveyed and a household roster was created with information on 3319 household members, of whom 522 were adolescent girls aged 15–19. Of those, 14% were currently married (95% Confidence Interval [CI] 0.11–0.18), and 11% were ever married under age 18 (95% CI 8–15%). Several variables were found to be significantly associated with hazard of child marriage including schooling, sex and employment status of head of household, as well as number of girls under age 18 in the childhood home.. Adult women tended to incorrectly identify minimum legal age at marriage and preferred low marital age for boys and girls – particularly in households of child brides. Among married adolescent girls, contraceptive use was very low (11%; 95% CI 4.94–22.40), and early childbearing was common (60%; 95% CI 45.56–72.89). Conclusions This research contributes to the evidence base on child marriage in humanitarian settings. Insights generated from this study have the potential to inform programs and interventions aiming to prevent and mitigate the impacts of this harmful practice.https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-021-11080-5DisplacementHumanitarian contextChild marriageAdolescent healthConflictSexual and reproductive health
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Shatha Elnakib
Kara Hunersen
Janna Metzler
Hailu Bekele
W. Courtland Robinson
spellingShingle Shatha Elnakib
Kara Hunersen
Janna Metzler
Hailu Bekele
W. Courtland Robinson
Child marriage among Somali refugees in Ethiopia: a cross sectional survey of adolescent girls and adult women
BMC Public Health
Displacement
Humanitarian context
Child marriage
Adolescent health
Conflict
Sexual and reproductive health
author_facet Shatha Elnakib
Kara Hunersen
Janna Metzler
Hailu Bekele
W. Courtland Robinson
author_sort Shatha Elnakib
title Child marriage among Somali refugees in Ethiopia: a cross sectional survey of adolescent girls and adult women
title_short Child marriage among Somali refugees in Ethiopia: a cross sectional survey of adolescent girls and adult women
title_full Child marriage among Somali refugees in Ethiopia: a cross sectional survey of adolescent girls and adult women
title_fullStr Child marriage among Somali refugees in Ethiopia: a cross sectional survey of adolescent girls and adult women
title_full_unstemmed Child marriage among Somali refugees in Ethiopia: a cross sectional survey of adolescent girls and adult women
title_sort child marriage among somali refugees in ethiopia: a cross sectional survey of adolescent girls and adult women
publisher BMC
series BMC Public Health
issn 1471-2458
publishDate 2021-06-01
description Abstract Background Despite child marriage receiving increased attention over the past two decades, research on child marriage in humanitarian settings remains scarce. This study sought to quantify child marriage among Somali adolescent girls residing in Kobe refugee camp in Ethiopia and to identify its correlates and consequences. Methods A cross-sectional survey was conducted using multi-stage cluster-based sampling with probability proportional to size. We randomly sampled households that have at least one female aged 15–49 and at least one adolescent female aged 10–19. In addition to calculating the proportion of girls married under age 18, we used survival methods – namely Kaplan Meier graphs and Cox proportional hazard models – to identify risk factors associated with child marriage in this context. We also used descriptive statistics to describe marital age preferences among female adults and presented measures of important sexual and reproductive health indicators among married adolescent girls. Results A total of 603 adult women were surveyed and a household roster was created with information on 3319 household members, of whom 522 were adolescent girls aged 15–19. Of those, 14% were currently married (95% Confidence Interval [CI] 0.11–0.18), and 11% were ever married under age 18 (95% CI 8–15%). Several variables were found to be significantly associated with hazard of child marriage including schooling, sex and employment status of head of household, as well as number of girls under age 18 in the childhood home.. Adult women tended to incorrectly identify minimum legal age at marriage and preferred low marital age for boys and girls – particularly in households of child brides. Among married adolescent girls, contraceptive use was very low (11%; 95% CI 4.94–22.40), and early childbearing was common (60%; 95% CI 45.56–72.89). Conclusions This research contributes to the evidence base on child marriage in humanitarian settings. Insights generated from this study have the potential to inform programs and interventions aiming to prevent and mitigate the impacts of this harmful practice.
topic Displacement
Humanitarian context
Child marriage
Adolescent health
Conflict
Sexual and reproductive health
url https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-021-11080-5
work_keys_str_mv AT shathaelnakib childmarriageamongsomalirefugeesinethiopiaacrosssectionalsurveyofadolescentgirlsandadultwomen
AT karahunersen childmarriageamongsomalirefugeesinethiopiaacrosssectionalsurveyofadolescentgirlsandadultwomen
AT jannametzler childmarriageamongsomalirefugeesinethiopiaacrosssectionalsurveyofadolescentgirlsandadultwomen
AT hailubekele childmarriageamongsomalirefugeesinethiopiaacrosssectionalsurveyofadolescentgirlsandadultwomen
AT wcourtlandrobinson childmarriageamongsomalirefugeesinethiopiaacrosssectionalsurveyofadolescentgirlsandadultwomen
_version_ 1721394430596874240