Estudios
I+D+I
Institución
Internacional
Vida Universitaria
Atlantis Institut des Sciences Fictives
Recherche
Soumettre
Personnaliser
Vos alertes
Vos paniers
Vos recherches
Aide
EN
/
ES
Accueil
>
articulos
> Gender roles and intimate partner violence among female university students in Spain: A cross-sectional study
Statistiques d'utilisation
Graphiques
Gender roles and intimate partner violence among female university students in Spain: A cross-sectional study
Llano-Suárez, A.
;
Lana, A.
;
Gasch-Gallén, Á.
(Universidad de Zaragoza)
;
Fernández-Feito, A.
Resumen:
Background Traditional gender roles (GRs) have a considerable influence on relationships among couples. These can lead to negative health effects in women; however, their impact on intimate partner violence (IPV) has been less explored, especially among younger women. Objective To explore the association between traditional GRs and several indicators of IPV on a sample of Spanish female university students involved in heterosexual dating relationships. Methods A cross-sectional study involving female university students (n = 1, 005) pursuing ten degrees (four Health Science degrees and six Social Sciences degrees). Data were collected using two validated scales: 1) the Questionnaire on the Gender Determinants of Contraception (COGANT), used to examine four traditional GRs (submissive, blind, and passive attitudes of female students, and male dominance), and 2) the Dating Violence Questionnaire-R (DVQ-R) scale, used to measure five types of IPV-behaviors (coercion, detachment, humiliation, sexual violence, and physical violence), perceived fear, entrapment, and abuse. Logistic and linear regressions were conducted to study the association between GR and a series of IPV indicators in dating relationships. Results Traditional GRs were highly prevalent (57.0% submissive, 52.0% blind attitude, 75.7% passive, and 31.7% identified their boyfriend as being dominant). Up to 66.3% experienced some type of violent behavior. All GRs were significantly associated with IPV indicators. A submissive attitude in female students was the GR that was most strongly associated to total IPV-behavior (adjusted odd ratio [OR] = 3.18; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 2.29-4.42), followed by male dominance (OR = 2.79: 95% CI:1.71: 4.54). Both GRs were also highly associated with perceived fear, entrapment, and abuse. Conclusions A high presence of traditional GRs was found in the relationships held by female university students, which was significantly associated with IPV indicators. Universities must adopt policies for gender equality and raise awareness on dating violence. Copyright: © 2021 Llano-Suárez et al. This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
Idioma:
Inglés
DOI:
10.1371/journal.pone.0259839
Año:
2021
Publicado en:
PLoS ONE
16, 11 (2021), e0259839 [19 pp]
ISSN:
1932-6203
Factor impacto JCR:
3.752 (2021)
Categ. JCR:
MULTIDISCIPLINARY SCIENCES
rank: 29 / 74 = 0.392
(2021)
- Q2
- T2
Factor impacto SCIMAGO:
0.852 -
Multidisciplinary
(Q1)
Tipo y forma:
Article (Published version)
Área (Departamento):
Área Enfermería
(
Dpto. Fisiatría y Enfermería
)
Exportado de SIDERAL (2023-05-18-16:02:49)
Permalink:
Copy
Visitas y descargas
Este artículo se encuentra en las siguientes colecciones:
articulos
>
articulos-por-area
>
enfermeria
Retour à la recherche
Notice créée le 2022-02-15, modifiée le 2023-05-19
Versión publicada:
PDF
Évaluer ce document:
Rate this document:
1
2
3
4
5
(Pas encore évalué)
Ajouter au panier personnel
Exporter vers
BibTeX
,
MARC
,
MARCXML
,
DC
,
EndNote
,
NLM
,
RefWorks