Neetu A. John’s research while affiliated with International Center for Research on Women and other places

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Publications (3)


Descriptive Statistics on Study Variables
Overall Psychological Well-being and sub-Scale Domain Scores by Age at Marriage in Niger and Ethiopia
Results from the Multivariate Linear Regressions Analysis Examining the Association of Child Marriage (CM) on Overall Psychological Well-being (O-PWB) and its Sub-
Child marriage and psychological well-being in Niger and Ethiopia
  • Article
  • Full-text available

August 2019

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1,818 Reads

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112 Citations

BMC Public Health

Neetu A. John

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Lydia Murithi

Background: Despite an understanding of the circumstances of child marriage, including how it limits agency and erodes childhood support systems, not much is known about the relationship between child marriage and mental health of child brides, especially in the sub-Saharan African context. To address this gap, we use large-scale population-based data from ever-married women aged 18-45 in Niger (n = 2764) and Ethiopia (n = 4149) to examine the association of child marriage with overall psychological well-being and its sub-domains: depression, anxiety, positive well-being, vitality, self-control and general health. We complement this with qualitative data from Ethiopia to further contextualize the psychological well-being of child brides. Methods: Multivariate linear regressions were conducted to estimate the association between child marriage and overall psychological well-being and its sub-domains. Thematic qualitative analysis was conducted to further understand the lives of child brides. Results: Our regression analysis found significant negative associations between very early marriage (marriage at 15 years or earlier) and overall psychological well-being in both Niger and Ethiopia. With the exception of self-control, all sub-domains of psychological well-being - depression, anxiety, positive well-being, vitality and general health - were negatively associated with very early marriage. In addition, in the qualitative analysis, Ethiopian child brides reported suffering emotional distress and depression induced by the burden of handling marital responsibilities at an early age. Conclusion: The study highlights that even in settings where child marriage is normative, marrying very early is associated with negative outcomes. Further research is needed to understand the mechanisms that make those married during early adolescence particularly vulnerable to psychological distress, so that programs can address those vulnerabilities.

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Child marriage and relationship quality in Ethiopia

November 2018

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246 Reads

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38 Citations

Child marriage is prevalent in Africa, with almost 40% of girls being married before age 18. Although child marriage is linked to a range of adverse outcomes, including intimate partner violence, little is known about the quality of these marriages in terms of the levels of communication, trust, equality, intimacy, conflict, marital satisfaction or happiness. We used both quantitative and qualitative data to examine how exact age at first marriage influenced multiple domains of relationship quality in Ethiopia. Our analysis was based on household survey data from 3396 currently married or recently divorced women aged 18–45, 32 in-depth interviews and 8 participatory focus groups in two regions. The regression results show a strong negative effect of marriage at or before age 12 on relationship quality across multiple domains. The qualitative data suggest a more pervasive effect on marital quality, with the lack of ability to choose whom they married and reduced agency emerging as particularly important factors influencing marital quality. This relationship may be direct or indirect, potentially mediated by factors such as intimate partner violence. Interventions intending to mitigate the effects of child marriage should include components that aim to improve the quality of spousal relationships, particularly in terms of communication and negotiation skills.


Citations (3)


... Developed countries (USA, Canada, and Western Europe) generally offer comprehensive programs across various adolescent health aspects, indicating a holistic approach (29,61). Developing countries (India, Nigeria, Pakistan) often show limited or basic programs, reflecting challenges in resources, societal attitudes, and policy emphasis on adolescent health (101)(102)(103). Parental involvement varies greatly, with developed nations favoring strong school-based programs and some developing nations favoring community-based approaches (104,105). ...

Reference:

Health behaviors in school-aged children: global trends in education, socioeconomic status, and adolescent health
Gender Socialization during Adolescence in Low-and Middle-Income Countries: Conceptualization, influences and outcomes

... Philippe Nonet and Philip Selznick, provide an explanation of the classification of law that exists in society, namely law in its form as a servant of repressive power, law as a separate institution that avoids repressive nature and protects its integrity, and law as a facilitator and liaison of various responses to social needs and aspirations needed by society or responsive law (Lieberman, 2019). In this study, the researcher will explain that responsive legal theory is a legal character and product that reflects the fulfillment of the conditions of society and the empirical facts of legal compliance that exist in them, both as individuals and in the form of social groups as objects of law, so that with this responsive legal theory it reflects and also fosters a sense of justice in society (John, Edmeades, & Murithi, 2019). In addition, the researcher will also describe and discuss the role of responsive legal theory which can explain the rigidity of the law that occurs in order to bring up a new understanding of law in the midst of the current digital era (Muslih, Nurdin, & Marzuki, 2020). ...

Child marriage and psychological well-being in Niger and Ethiopia

BMC Public Health

... The problems within the relationship included lack of trust, intimacy, and communication breakdown. Other factors decreasing satisfaction with marriage include not having a say in choosing whom to marry and when to marry, not being ready for sex in the early years of marriage, and a lack of autonomy (John et al., 2019). ...

Child marriage and relationship quality in Ethiopia