Deaths among young, single women in 2000-2001 in the West Bank, Palestinian occupied territories

Type Journal Article - Reproductive health matters
Title Deaths among young, single women in 2000-2001 in the West Bank, Palestinian occupied territories
Author(s)
Volume 16
Issue 31
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2008
Page numbers 112-121
URL http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1016/S0968-8080(08)31340-8
Abstract
A study in 2000–2001 of causes of death of women of reproductive age (15–49) in the West Bank, Palestinian Occupied Territories, found that 154 of the 411 deceased women aged 15–49 with known marital status were single. Death notification forms for reported deaths were analysed and verbal autopsies carried out, where possible, with relatives of the deceased women. We found important differences in the age at death and causes of death among the single and married women, which can be attributed to the disadvantaged social status of single women in Palestinian society, exacerbated by the current unstable political situation. 41% of the deceased single women were under 25 years of age at death compared to 8% of the married women. The proportion of violent deaths and suicides among the single women was almost twice as high as among the married women, mainly in those below age 25. The single women were also more likely to die from medical conditions which indicated that they faced barriers to accessing health care. The fieldwork was conducted at the height of the Intifada and the Israeli military response, with heavy restrictions on mobility, limiting the possibility of probing deeper into the circumstances surrounding sensitive deaths. More research into the socio-cultural context of single women in Palestine society is needed as a basis for intervention.

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