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Journal Article

Citation

Knight L, Nakuti J, Allen E, Gannett KR, Naker D, Devries KM. Int. Health 2015; 8(1): 27-35.

Affiliation

London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, 15-17 Tavistock place, London, UK.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2015, Oxford University Press)

DOI

10.1093/inthealth/ihv069

PMID

26647396

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The nature and structure of the school environment has the potential to shape children's health and well being. Few studies have explored the importance of school-level factors in explaining a child's likelihood of experiencing violence from school staff, particularly in low-resource settings such as Uganda.

METHODS: To quantify to what extent a student's risk of violence is determined by school-level factors we fitted multilevel logistic regression models to investigate associations and present between-school variance partition coefficients. School structural factors, academic and supportive environment are explored.

RESULTS: 53% of students reported physical violence from staff. Only 6% of variation in students' experience of violence was due to differences between schools and half the variation was explained by the school-level factors modelled. Schools with a higher proportion of girls are associated with increased odds of physical violence from staff. Students in schools with a high level of student perceptions of school connectedness have a 36% reduced odds of experiencing physical violence from staff, but no other school-level factor was significantly associated.

CONCLUSION: Our findings suggest that physical violence by school staff is widespread across different types of schools in this setting, but interventions that improve students' school connectedness should be considered.


Language: en

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