Child sexual abuse in India: A systematic review.
Vikas ChoudhryRadhika DayalDivya PillaiAmeeta S KalokheKlaus BeierVikram PatelPublished in: PloS one (2018)
Fifty-one studies met inclusion criteria for the review. The review indicates that prevalence rates of CSA is high among both boys and girls in India. Due to heterogeneity of study designs and lack of standardised assessments, reported prevalence estimates varied greatly among both genders in different studies. There is a need to conduct representative studies using a validated instrument to obtain valid epidemiological estimates. Commercial sex workers, men who have sex with men, and women with psychiatric disorders were at higher risks for sexual abuse during childhood. In addition, the synthesis of qualitative data across studies included in the review suggests that exposure and perpetration of CSA is a multifaceted phenomenon grounded in the interplay between individual, family, community, and societal factors. The review indicates poor physical, behavioural, social, and mental health outcomes of CSA in India. We conclude with a research agenda calling for quantitative and qualitative studies to explore the determinants and perpetration of child sexual abuse in India from an ecological lens. This research agenda may be necessary to inform the development of a culturally tailored primary prevention and treatment strategy for CSA victims in India.
Keyphrases
- mental health
- men who have sex with men
- case control
- healthcare
- hiv positive
- systematic review
- risk factors
- hiv testing
- intimate partner violence
- physical activity
- risk assessment
- high resolution
- single cell
- climate change
- human health
- mass spectrometry
- public health
- electronic health record
- smoking cessation
- antiretroviral therapy
- big data
- hiv infected
- artificial intelligence