R
Ruchira Tabassum Naved
Researcher at International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh
Publications - 71
Citations - 2516
Ruchira Tabassum Naved is an academic researcher from International Centre for Diarrhoeal Disease Research, Bangladesh. The author has contributed to research in topics: Domestic violence & Poison control. The author has an hindex of 24, co-authored 65 publications receiving 2070 citations.
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Factors associated with spousal physical violence against women in bangladesh
TL;DR: Factors associated with domestic violence in urban and rural Bangladesh revealed that in both residential areas, dowry or other demands in marriage and a history of abuse of the husband's mother by his father increased the risk of violence.
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Physical violence by husbands: magnitude, disclosure and help-seeking behavior of women in Bangladesh.
TL;DR: The findings show that although providing appropriate services is absolutely necessary, it is also important to foster the use of such services and to help women overcome the barriers for accessing these services.
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Transition to Adulthood of Female Garment-factory Workers in Bangladesh
TL;DR: Examination of data from a study on garment-factory workers in Bangladesh finds a period of adolescence for young women working in the garment sector that is shown to have strong implications for the women's long-term reproductive health.
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Pathways between childhood trauma, intimate partner violence, and harsh parenting: findings from the UN Multi-country Study on men and Violence in Asia and the Pacific.
Emma Fulu,Stephanie S. Miedema,Tim Roselli,Sarah McCook,Ko Ling Chan,Regine Haardörfer,Rachel Jewkes,Xian Warner,James Lang,Ruchira Tabassum Naved,Hamidul Huque,Subrina Farah,Muhammad Mizanur Rashid Shuvra,Arthur Erken,Wang Xiangxian,Fang Gang,Li Hongtao,Zeljka Mudrovcic,Wen Hua,Arie Hoekman,Elina Nikulainen,Bernard Coquelin,Mariam Khan,Wenny Kusuma,Clara Magariño Manero,Freya Larsen,Saba Moussavi,Neloufer de Mel,Pradeep Peiris,Shyamala Gomez,Kamani Jinadasa,Yandisa Sikweyiya,Nwabisa Shai,Francesca Drapuluvik-Tinabar,Peterson Magoola,Anthony Agyenta,Thomas Shanahan,Tracy Vienings,Claudia García-Moreno,Raewyn Connell,Gary Barker,Alan Greig,Rahul Roy,Ravi Verma,Kalyani Menon Sen,Scott Johnson +45 more
TL;DR: There were significant, often gendered, pathways between men's and women's perpetration and experiences of childhood trauma, physical intimate partner violence, harsh parenting, and other factors.
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Prevalence and Correlates of Physical Spousal Violence Against Women in Slum and Nonslum Areas of Urban Bangladesh
TL;DR: The present findings suggest the need for comprehensive prevention and intervention strategies that capitalize on the interplay of individual and sociocultural factors that cause physical spousal violence in urban Bangladesh.