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Female homicides and femicides in Ecuador: a nationwide ecological analysis from 2001 to 2017

Female homicides and femicides in Ecuador: a nationwide ecological analysis from 2001 to 2017
Female homicides and femicides in Ecuador: a nationwide ecological analysis from 2001 to 2017
Background: gender–based violence is a major public health concern arising from the structural discrimination of women and girls. In 2014, Ecuador criminalized acts of femicide in response to a growing crisis across the region. As no epidemiological studies on the state of female homicides and femicides have been published, we estimated patterns of female homicides and femicides nationally and the burden through economic cost per years of life lost, between 2001 and 2017.

Methods: using aggregated data from the National Institute of Census and Statistics and police records we estimated the annual mortality rates, cumulative incidence and prevalence odds ratios for female homicides and femicides, from 2001 to 2017. The impact of aggressions, assaults and violence on years of life lost due to premature mortality was estimated using the Human Capital method.

Results: over the period, at least 3236 cases of female homicides and femicides were reported. The highest murder rate occurred in the province of Sucumbíos (6.5 per 100,000) and in the Putumayo canton (12.5 per 100,000). The most common way to murder their victims was using firearms (38%). The highest odds ratio was estimated for women aged between 25 and 29, at 4.5 (3.9–5.1), of primary school attainment at 17.2 (14.6–20.3) and of Afro-Ecuadoran descent 18.1 (10.5–30.9). Female homicide-related costs reached, on average, $35 million per year and more than $500 million lost from 2001 to 2017.

Conclusions: the high rates, distribution and cost indicate that investments are urgently needed to address the structural causes and reduce the impact of female homicides and femicides in Ecuador; thereby protecting the livelihood and well-being of their women and girls.
Crime, Female homicide, Femicide, Gender, Gender-based violence, Violence
1472-6874
Ortiz‑Prado, Esteban
969b2120-aa34-42e1-88c8-391606c1cdb0
Villagran, Paola
cdb58844-7da2-4454-b504-4335633debec
Martinez‑Abarca, Ana Lucia
f141521c-b1e8-4350-bfd7-ad1b09a4a7c3
Henriquez‑Trujillo, Aquiles R.
f67ec63f-d549-43a3-960c-0b53d092f91f
Simbaña‑Rivera, Katherine
259a796c-8f0b-4f71-abeb-f5c6f5a648b9
Gómez‑BarrenoDiaz, Lenin Ana M.
58c67389-f330-4ae0-9f7f-e2c7d2d4747a
Moyano, Carla E.
90f80ea7-bf44-4f56-bb7c-348f09a29931
Arcos‑Valle, Vanessa
f3f1a288-cf75-45de-8b1b-f13e7626babe
Dolores Miño, Maria
cfaf6ea7-fff2-4b67-9bca-d1c434f1bc03
Morgan, Sara
8ad10b7e-2005-4e93-9948-164a69489350
Ortiz‑Prado, Esteban
969b2120-aa34-42e1-88c8-391606c1cdb0
Villagran, Paola
cdb58844-7da2-4454-b504-4335633debec
Martinez‑Abarca, Ana Lucia
f141521c-b1e8-4350-bfd7-ad1b09a4a7c3
Henriquez‑Trujillo, Aquiles R.
f67ec63f-d549-43a3-960c-0b53d092f91f
Simbaña‑Rivera, Katherine
259a796c-8f0b-4f71-abeb-f5c6f5a648b9
Gómez‑BarrenoDiaz, Lenin Ana M.
58c67389-f330-4ae0-9f7f-e2c7d2d4747a
Moyano, Carla E.
90f80ea7-bf44-4f56-bb7c-348f09a29931
Arcos‑Valle, Vanessa
f3f1a288-cf75-45de-8b1b-f13e7626babe
Dolores Miño, Maria
cfaf6ea7-fff2-4b67-9bca-d1c434f1bc03
Morgan, Sara
8ad10b7e-2005-4e93-9948-164a69489350

Ortiz‑Prado, Esteban, Villagran, Paola, Martinez‑Abarca, Ana Lucia, Henriquez‑Trujillo, Aquiles R., Simbaña‑Rivera, Katherine, Gómez‑BarrenoDiaz, Lenin Ana M., Moyano, Carla E., Arcos‑Valle, Vanessa, Dolores Miño, Maria and Morgan, Sara (2022) Female homicides and femicides in Ecuador: a nationwide ecological analysis from 2001 to 2017. BMC Women’s Health, 22 (1), [260]. (doi:10.1186/s12905-022-01839-2).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: gender–based violence is a major public health concern arising from the structural discrimination of women and girls. In 2014, Ecuador criminalized acts of femicide in response to a growing crisis across the region. As no epidemiological studies on the state of female homicides and femicides have been published, we estimated patterns of female homicides and femicides nationally and the burden through economic cost per years of life lost, between 2001 and 2017.

Methods: using aggregated data from the National Institute of Census and Statistics and police records we estimated the annual mortality rates, cumulative incidence and prevalence odds ratios for female homicides and femicides, from 2001 to 2017. The impact of aggressions, assaults and violence on years of life lost due to premature mortality was estimated using the Human Capital method.

Results: over the period, at least 3236 cases of female homicides and femicides were reported. The highest murder rate occurred in the province of Sucumbíos (6.5 per 100,000) and in the Putumayo canton (12.5 per 100,000). The most common way to murder their victims was using firearms (38%). The highest odds ratio was estimated for women aged between 25 and 29, at 4.5 (3.9–5.1), of primary school attainment at 17.2 (14.6–20.3) and of Afro-Ecuadoran descent 18.1 (10.5–30.9). Female homicide-related costs reached, on average, $35 million per year and more than $500 million lost from 2001 to 2017.

Conclusions: the high rates, distribution and cost indicate that investments are urgently needed to address the structural causes and reduce the impact of female homicides and femicides in Ecuador; thereby protecting the livelihood and well-being of their women and girls.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 27 June 2022
Published date: 27 June 2022
Additional Information: Funding Information: This work was funded by the Universidad de Las Americas through their annual general research projects funds. Publisher Copyright: © 2022, The Author(s).
Keywords: Crime, Female homicide, Femicide, Gender, Gender-based violence, Violence

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 468152
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/468152
ISSN: 1472-6874
PURE UUID: a6a1fc77-c1b9-40ef-9c81-0e3a38d17351

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Date deposited: 04 Aug 2022 16:32
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 18:17

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Contributors

Author: Esteban Ortiz‑Prado
Author: Paola Villagran
Author: Ana Lucia Martinez‑Abarca
Author: Aquiles R. Henriquez‑Trujillo
Author: Katherine Simbaña‑Rivera
Author: Lenin Ana M. Gómez‑BarrenoDiaz
Author: Carla E. Moyano
Author: Vanessa Arcos‑Valle
Author: Maria Dolores Miño
Author: Sara Morgan

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