Suicidal Thoughts, Depression, Post-Traumatic Stress, and Harmful Alcohol Use Associated with Intimate Partner Violence and Rape Exposures among Female Students in South Africa.
Mercilene Tanyaradzwa MachisaEsnat D ChirwaPinky MahlanguNcediswa NunzeYandisa SikweyiyaElizabeth DartnallManaga PillayRachel JewkesPublished in: International journal of environmental research and public health (2022)
While ample evidence from high-income country settings indicates the prevalence and risk factors for multiple mental ill-health symptoms in student populations, evidence from low- and middle-income higher education settings remains limited. We determined the frequency, associations, and structural pathways between mental health outcomes and possible risk factors among a sample of 1292 predominantly Black African and female students ages 18-30 years, enrolled at nine purposefully selected public universities and Technical Vocational Education and Training (TVET) campuses. We measured and created a mental ill-health latent outcome consisting of depressive symptoms, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and suicidal thoughts. We also measured traumatic exposures including childhood trauma, recent intimate partner violence (IPV), non-partner rape, and other life traumatic events. We used structural equation modelling to analyse data. We found that 50% of the surveyed students binge drank, 43% reported depressive symptoms, 9% reported PTSD symptoms, and 21% had suicidal thoughts. Students' experiences of childhood trauma, food insecurity, other traumatic events, non-partner rape, and IPV impacted the mental ill-health latent. IPV experiences mediated the relationships between experiences of childhood trauma or other trauma and the mental ill-health latent, and the relationship between binge drinking and other life traumatic events. Non-partner rape mediated the relationship between food insecurity and the mental ill-health latent. Binge drinking directly impacted non-partner rape experience. The findings substantiate the need for campus-based mental health promotion, psychosocial services and treatments, and implementation of combined interventions that address the intersections of violence against women and mental health among students in South Africa.
Keyphrases
- mental health
- intimate partner violence
- depressive symptoms
- healthcare
- mental illness
- south africa
- social support
- spinal cord injury
- high school
- health promotion
- risk factors
- sleep quality
- public health
- physical activity
- primary care
- pregnant women
- air pollution
- emergency department
- risk assessment
- type diabetes
- hiv testing
- skeletal muscle
- adipose tissue
- human immunodeficiency virus
- posttraumatic stress disorder
- hepatitis c virus
- men who have sex with men
- climate change
- human health