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Background: Gender-based violence is a pervasive issue in Pakistan, necessitating effective interventions to enhance the responsiveness of healthcare workers' capacity to respond effectively to Gender-based violence. This study aims to strengthen the health system's response to Gender-based violence by implementing a need-based Life Skills-Based Training program for healthcare providers in Pakistan.
Method: A quasi-experimental pre-post study design was employed. The intervention, i.e., Life Skills-Based Training program was implemented across four diverse districts Matiari and Shadadkot (Sindh), Chitral (Khyber Pakhtunkhwa), and Gilgit (Gilgit-Baltistan) to ensure geographic and sociocultural variation. A total of 84 healthcare providers and 78 stakeholders were purposively selected based on their roles in patient care or Gender-based violence-related policymaking. Life Skills-Based Training was delivered over six days at each site, including tailored modules for healthcare providers and stakeholders, focusing on Gender-based violence concepts, screening, counseling, referral pathways, and system-level advocacy. A pre- and post-test assessment was administered to measure changes in knowledge, competencies, and attitudes using structured questionnaires adapted from UNHCR and UNICEF tools. Quantitative analysis of score improvements and qualitative feedback were used to evaluate training effectiveness.
Results: A comparative analysis of pre- and post-test assessments demonstrated significant improvements in participants' Gender-based violence knowledge, awareness, and case management skills, with high satisfaction reported in Life Skills-Based Training evaluations. Feedback highlighted themes such as the effectiveness of training, the need for competent professionals, involving community leaders, replicating sessions, government health system responses, and integrating Gender-based violence education into curricula. Follow-up results demonstrated the sustainability of interventions, with participants actively applying their knowledge and leading community education.
Conclusion: The study highlights the need for continuous capacity-building and integrating Gender-based violence education into healthcare and educational systems to improve support for survivors. Strengthening the health workforce with targeted training and protocols is essential for addressing Gender-based violence effectively, offering a framework for similar efforts in other regions to foster equitable and responsive healthcare.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s12913-025-13041-9 | DOI Listing |
J Homosex
September 2025
Faculty of Arts and Society, Charles Darwin University, Darwin, Australia.
This article explores the multifaceted challenges and potential strategies for addressing corrective rape in South African townships. Corrective rape, a violent form of gender-based violence primarily targeting lesbian women, is entrenched in patriarchal norms, homophobia, and racialized backlash that complicate anti-rape advocacy. Through a critical review of existing literature, this study highlights how these intersecting forces hinder progress while also identifying opportunities for intervention.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFViolence Against Women
September 2025
Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI, USA.
Latin American women, girls, and LGBTQ+ (lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer) individuals experience high rates of violence, making Latin America one of the world's most affected regions for gender-based violence. Television, a powerful socialization tool, shapes attitudes and influences behavior. This study analyzes 50 episodes from nine Spanish-language TV series set in Latin America, finding that 90% of episodes depict gender-based violence.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFFront Reprod Health
August 2025
Ipas Nepal, Kathmandu, Nepal.
Background: Nepal is highly affected by climate change, experiencing glacier melting, untimely rainfall, floods, landslides, forest fires, and droughts, which collectively impact over 10 million people. There is a larger impact of climate change on human health, but its impact on women's and girls' sexual and reproductive health and rights is yet to be explored. Thus, this study aims to understand the linkages between climate change and the unique impact on gender and sexual, and reproductive health and rights (SRHR).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSoc Sci Med
August 2025
Centre for Gender Research, Uppsala University, Sweden. Electronic address:
The use of donor eggs, sperm and embryos in medically assisted reproduction (MAR) provide new possibilities for reproductive assistance and family-making. In clinical practice, it also brings to light questions of responsibility and ethical conduct. Despite this, fertility practitioners' reasoning in clinical decision-making remains surprisingly understudied.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIndividual belief in a rigid definition of gender underlies significant social costs, from the gender pay gap, violence and discrimination against transgender and gender diverse people, to global economic losses. These beliefs are often rooted in essentialist thinking that gender is distinct, non-overlapping, unchangeable, and biologically based. Gender is a multidimensional social concept, partly informed by perceptions of sex, which is a distinct concept referring to a collection of biological traits.
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