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Violence Against Women
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1077801208331063v1
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*Women's Health
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Article

Collecting Reliable Information About Violence Against Women Safely in Household Interviews: Experience From a Large-Scale National Survey in South Asia

Neil Andersson1, Anne Cockcroft2*, Noor Ansari3, Khalid Omer3, Ubaid Ullah Chaudhry3, Amir Khan4, and LuWei Pearson5

1 CIET Mexico
2 CIET Trust, Johannesburg
3 CIET Pakistan
4 University of Peshawar
5 UNICEF Ethiopia

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: acockcroft{at}ciet.org.


   Abstract
This article describes the first national survey of violence against women in Pakistan from 2001 to 2004 covering 23,430 women. The survey took account of methodological and ethical recommendations, ensuring privacy of interviews through one person interviewing the mother-in-law while another interviewed the eligible woman privately. The training module for interviewers focused on empathy with respondents, notably increasing disclosure rates. Only 3% of women declined to participate, and 1% were not permitted to participate. Among women who disclosed physical violence, only one third had previously told anyone. Surveys of violence against women in Pakistan not using methods to minimize underreporting could seriously underestimate prevalence.

First published on February 11, 2009, doi:10.1177/1077801208331063

Violence Against Women 2009;15:482.

A more recent version of this article appeared on April 1, 2009


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