Associations of physical partner violence and sexual violence victimization on health risk behaviours and mental health among university students from 25 countries

© 2020 The Author(s). Background: The study aimed to investigate the associations between physical partner violence victimization (IPV) and/or sexual violence victimization and various health risk behaviours and mental health in university students in 25 countries. Methods: Using a cross-sectional s...

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Main Authors: Supa Pengpid, Karl Peltzer
Other Authors: University of Limpopo
Format: Article
Published: 2020
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Online Access:https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/58068
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spelling th-mahidol.580682020-08-25T17:29:12Z Associations of physical partner violence and sexual violence victimization on health risk behaviours and mental health among university students from 25 countries Supa Pengpid Supa Pengpid Karl Peltzer University of Limpopo University of the Free State Mahidol University Medicine © 2020 The Author(s). Background: The study aimed to investigate the associations between physical partner violence victimization (IPV) and/or sexual violence victimization and various health risk behaviours and mental health in university students in 25 countries. Methods: Using a cross-sectional study design, 18,335 university students with a median age of 20 years from 25 countries in Africa, the Americas and Asia, replied to self-reported measures of interpersonal violence, health compromising behaviours, mental health measures and protective factors. Results: In adjusted logistic regression analysis, physical IPV and/or sexual violence victimization was associated, among men and/or among women, with sexual risk behaviours (multiple sexual partners, alcohol use in the context of sex, diagnosed with HIV and pregnancy), violence related behaviour (in a physical fight and carrying a weapon), poor mental health (depression, loneliness, post-traumatic stress disorder, sleeping problem and short sleep), addictive behaviour (binge drinking, tobacco and drug use), and other health risk behaviour (skipping breakfast and frequent salt intake). Conclusions: We found evidence that physical IPV and/or sexual violence victimization among female and/or male university students was associated with 4 of 5 sexual risk behaviours, 2 violence related behaviours, 5 of 5 poor mental health indicators, 3 of 3 addictive behaviours and 2 of 7 other health risk behaviours. 2020-08-25T10:29:12Z 2020-08-25T10:29:12Z 2020-07-02 Article BMC Public Health. Vol.20, No.1 (2020) 10.1186/s12889-020-09064-y 14712458 2-s2.0-85087438946 https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/58068 Mahidol University SCOPUS https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=85087438946&origin=inward
institution Mahidol University
building Mahidol University Library
continent Asia
country Thailand
Thailand
content_provider Mahidol University Library
collection Mahidol University Institutional Repository
topic Medicine
spellingShingle Medicine
Supa Pengpid
Supa Pengpid
Karl Peltzer
Associations of physical partner violence and sexual violence victimization on health risk behaviours and mental health among university students from 25 countries
description © 2020 The Author(s). Background: The study aimed to investigate the associations between physical partner violence victimization (IPV) and/or sexual violence victimization and various health risk behaviours and mental health in university students in 25 countries. Methods: Using a cross-sectional study design, 18,335 university students with a median age of 20 years from 25 countries in Africa, the Americas and Asia, replied to self-reported measures of interpersonal violence, health compromising behaviours, mental health measures and protective factors. Results: In adjusted logistic regression analysis, physical IPV and/or sexual violence victimization was associated, among men and/or among women, with sexual risk behaviours (multiple sexual partners, alcohol use in the context of sex, diagnosed with HIV and pregnancy), violence related behaviour (in a physical fight and carrying a weapon), poor mental health (depression, loneliness, post-traumatic stress disorder, sleeping problem and short sleep), addictive behaviour (binge drinking, tobacco and drug use), and other health risk behaviour (skipping breakfast and frequent salt intake). Conclusions: We found evidence that physical IPV and/or sexual violence victimization among female and/or male university students was associated with 4 of 5 sexual risk behaviours, 2 violence related behaviours, 5 of 5 poor mental health indicators, 3 of 3 addictive behaviours and 2 of 7 other health risk behaviours.
author2 University of Limpopo
author_facet University of Limpopo
Supa Pengpid
Supa Pengpid
Karl Peltzer
format Article
author Supa Pengpid
Supa Pengpid
Karl Peltzer
author_sort Supa Pengpid
title Associations of physical partner violence and sexual violence victimization on health risk behaviours and mental health among university students from 25 countries
title_short Associations of physical partner violence and sexual violence victimization on health risk behaviours and mental health among university students from 25 countries
title_full Associations of physical partner violence and sexual violence victimization on health risk behaviours and mental health among university students from 25 countries
title_fullStr Associations of physical partner violence and sexual violence victimization on health risk behaviours and mental health among university students from 25 countries
title_full_unstemmed Associations of physical partner violence and sexual violence victimization on health risk behaviours and mental health among university students from 25 countries
title_sort associations of physical partner violence and sexual violence victimization on health risk behaviours and mental health among university students from 25 countries
publishDate 2020
url https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/58068
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