Rurality and Self-Reported Health in Women with a History of Intimate Partner Violence

Date

2016-09-13

Authors

Dillon, Gina
Hussain, Rafat
Loxton, Deborah
Khan, Asad

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Public Library of Science

Abstract

OBJECTIVE To investigate differences in self-reported health among Australian women with a history of intimate partner violence (IPV) in relation to rurality of residence. METHODS Data were drawn from six survey waves of the Australian Longitudinal Study on Women's Health 1973-78 birth cohort. Self-reported general and mental health scores derived from the SF-36 scale were compared for women with a history of IPV living in metropolitan, regional and rural areas. Multivariable generalised estimating equations were constructed adjusting for income hardship, number of children, education, social support, age and marital status. RESULTS Women with a history of IPV living in regional and rural areas had no significant differences in self-reported general health scores compared to their metropolitan counterparts. Rural women affected by IPV had slightly better self-reported mental health than equivalent women living in metropolitan or regional areas. The socio-demographic factors with the strongest association with self-reported health were income, education, social support, and number of children. CONCLUSIONS Women in regional and rural areas were no more disadvantaged, in terms of self-reported general health or mental health, than IPV affected women living in major cities in Australia.

Description

Keywords

adult, Australia, cohort studies, female, humans, longitudinal studies, mental health, multivariate analysis, rural health, rural population, self report, socioeconomic factors, spouse abuse, urban health, urban population, women's health

Citation

Source

PloS one

Type

Journal article

Book Title

Entity type

Access Statement

Open Access

License Rights

Restricted until