(Translated by https://www.hiragana.jp/)
WHO | World Health Organization
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Sexual and reproductive health

Violence against women (VAW)

A community supervisor speaking to women on gender equality and domestic violence, in the Dharavi slums of Mumbai, India
Photoshare/Benazir Patil

The United Nations defines violence against women as any act of gender-based violence that results in, or is likely to result in, physical, sexual or mental harm or suffering to women, including threats of such acts, coercion or arbitrary deprivation of liberty, whether occurring in public or in private life.

WHO multi-country study

Women's health and domestic violence against women
WHO’s landmark study documents the horrifying extent of violence against women by their intimate partners. It also clearly shows that violence against women demands a public health response, because the impact of such violence goes far beyond the immediate harm caused, affecting all aspects of women’s future health.

Prevention and response

A female student in Southern Tanzania reads about violence against girls during a youth festival.
Photoshare/Felicity Thompson

To help ensure better care and support for those who have experienced partner violence or sexual violence, WHO works, among other things, to strengthen the health sector response to violence against women.

Intimate partner violence in pregnancy

A pregnant woman walks through the maternity ward of the Lagos State University Teaching Hospital in the city of Lagos, Nigeria
UNICEF/Christine Nesbitt

Intimate partner violence during pregnancy has been found to be associated with fatal and non-fatal adverse health outcomes for the pregnant woman and her baby due to the direct trauma of abuse to a pregnant woman’s body, as well as the physiological effects of stress from current or past abuse on fetal growth and development.

About sexual violence

Sexual violence is a serious public health and human rights problem with both short- and long-term consequences on women's physical, mental, and sexual and reproductive health.

Violence against women and HIV

Growing evidence shows that violence increases women's vulnerability to HIV. HIV can also be a risk factor for violence, since disclosure can put some women at risk of violence by their partners, family or community members.