TY - JOUR PY - 2021// TI - Gender-based violence shadows COVID-19: Increased sexual violence, HIV exposure and teen pregnancy among girls and women in Uganda [conference abstract] JO - Journal of the international AIDS society A1 - Apondi, R. A1 - Awor, Ac A1 - Nelson, Lj A1 - Cheptoris, J. A1 - Ngabirano, F. A1 - Egbulem, C. D. A1 - Alamo, S. A1 - Mills, La A1 - Hegle, J. SP - 53 EP - 55 VL - 24 IS - S4 N2 - Oral abstracts of the 11th IAS Conference on HIV Science, 18-21 July 2021 OAD0301 Background: The COVID-19 pandemic is associated with increased gender-based violence (GBV) perpetration. However, the COVID-19 response did not prioritize GBV services, negatively impacting post-violence care ser vice access among girls/women in Uganda. We analysed routine programme data to correlate COVID-19 restrictions with GBV violence reports, post-exposure prophylaxis (PEP) uptake and teen pregnancy among Ugandan females. Methods: Violence data from the Uganda Health Management System (HMIS) and Ministry of Gender Labor and Social Development reports (Uganda Child-Helpline (UCHL)) were analysed. The analysis included reports involving females (all ages) from HMIS and females aged <18 years from UCHL. Two six-month time periods were compared: October-2019 to March-2020 (pre-COVID-19 period) and April-2020 to Septempter-2020 (COVID-19 period). From HMIS, selected outcome variables for sexual violence were post-rape reports and PEP uptake; from UCHL selected outcomes were sexual violence (SV) reports and reported teen pregnancy. Frequency distributions to measure prevalence and chi-square statistics were calculated to assess significant differences and computed odds of occurrence associated with time period. Results: In pre-COVID-19 period, 17,702 females reported for post-rape care and 3274 received PEP compared to 22,013 and 3348, respectively, during COVID-19 period. This translates to a 24% increase in post-rape reports and 18% reduction in PEP uptake between two periods. The odds of receiving PEP during COVID-19 period were 0.79 times (95% CI 0.75 to 0.83) lower compared to pre-COVID-19 period. Over 50% of those who reported post-rape care after the recommended 72-hour intervention timeframe cited lockdown restrictions as the main reason for coming late. In pre COVID-19 period, 593 girls reported SV, and 73 reported teen pregnancy compared to 860 SV and 117 teen pregnancies in COVID-19 period. The odds of reporting SV during COVID-19 period was 1.30 times (95% CI: 1.12 to 1.51) higher compared to pre-COVID-19 period. There was a 17% increase in teen pregnancy between two periods, not statistically significant (OR 1.121, 95% CI, 0.82 to 1.53). Conclusions: During Uganda's COVID-19 lockdown, sexual violence reports increased, increasing HIV exposure in national data, taking into consideration possible underestimated true GBV increase associated with COVID-19 related disruptions. Investment in unhindered, flexible and adaptable GBV mitigation is important during pandemics.
Language: en
LA - en SN - 1758-2652 UR - http://dx.doi.org/ ID - ref1 ER -