The Prevalence of Intimate Partner Violence and Its Association With Adult Attachment Styles Among University of Nairobi Undergraduate Students
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Date
2024Author
Kalantle, Onalenna A
Type
ThesisLanguage
enMetadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Intimate partner violence (IPV) is one of the major alarming issues in public health recognized
globally as an urgent matter fundamental to human rights violation. IPV and dating are found to
be most common amongst early adolescence and increase towards early young adulthood. Media
reports across the world and Kenyan media report high number of IPV among university learners
that has led to murder, poor academic performance and psychological trauma. The severity of the
problem has given rise to a large body of research that has attempted to find the variables
associated with IPV to alleviate its occurrence but there is limited empirical evidence in relation
to individual psychological factors such as attachment styles using attachment theory. The
objective of this analytical cross-sectional study found out the prevalence of IPV and determined
whether adult attachment styles, sociodemographic factors are associated with IPV among
undergraduate students at University of Nairobi (UON). This study used quantitative data
collection that used validated and standardized tools which are Adult Attachment Scale to measure
attachment styles and WHO scale to measure IPV. The designed sociodemographic scale was used
to measure sociodemographic factors. The data was collected among UON undergraduates
studying at Main campus UON towers and Kenyatta National Hospital in Kenya, Nairobi between
April and June 2024. Quantitative data was collected electronically using Kobo Collect, and
analyzed using STATA version 17 that analyzed association of sociodemographic factors and
attachment styles in relation to IPV using both bivariate and multi variate logistic analyses to show
the outcomes. All analyses were conducted at 95% Confidence Interval (95% CI). For all
statistical tests, a p value<0.05 indicate statistical significance. Of the 445 participants, majority
were females by (61.3% ) compared to males (38.7%). In terms of age, higher proportion were
between the age of 18-25 years old by 81.3%. The prevalence of IPV was 41.1%. IPV were found
to be significantly associated with anxious attachment and avoidant attachment styles. Students
with anxious attachment style were 4 times more likely to experience IPV compared those with
secure attachment (p 0.00, OR 3.99, 95% CI; 2.4-6.7). Participants who reported to had avoidant
attachment style were twice as likely to experience IPV as compared to secure attachment style (p
0.02, OR 2.15, 95% CI; 1.1-4.1). Smoking cigarette (AOR= 4.0, p = 0.038) and smoking marijuana
(AOR = 2.4, p= 0.026) were all significantly related to ever experiencing IPV. Gender, age, and
course did not have significant association with IPV
Publisher
University of Nairobi
Rights
Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 3.0 United StatesUsage Rights
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/3.0/us/Collections
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