- Evidence indicates VAWG increased during the first year of the COVID‑19 pandemic; most studies focused on COVID‑19 and few disaggregated women versus girls.
- Five mechanisms drove increased VAWG: income loss, movement restrictions, reduced access to services, fear of infection, and legacy mistrust in health systems.
- Outbreak responses must combine immediate protective measures and long-term structural reforms, plus improved surveillance, to protect women, girls and marginalised populations.
BMJ Glob Health. 2026 May 5;11(5):e020982. doi: 10.1136/bmjgh-2025-020982.
ABSTRACT
Infectious disease outbreaks (outbreaks) are increasing across the globe due to climate change, urbanisation and changes in land use, and many of their response measures impact risk factors for violence against women and girls (VAWG). We conducted a systematic review to consolidate existing evidence on the impact of any outbreaks, and their public health responses, on the change in magnitude of VAWG and mechanisms facilitating violence among women and girls in low-income and middle-income countries. Though our search strategy aimed to capture studies from any outbreak since 2014, all quantitative evidence on VAWG impacts, and all but one qualitative study, focused on the COVID-19 pandemic, and only three studies disaggregated outcomes for women versus girls. Overall, our synthesis of the evidence points to increased VAWG during the first year of the COVID-19 pandemic compared with pre-pandemic levels. We identified five broad mechanisms through which violence occurred against women and girls: (1) income loss due to economic shutdown, financial insecurity, and/or job loss, (2) movement restrictions, (3) changes in access to public services, (4) fear of exposure to infectious disease, and (5) a legacy of mistrust in health systems from previous outbreaks. Our study demonstrates the novelty of VAWG monitoring during outbreaks, the need for increased surveillance and the known mechanisms to date through which VAWG may be perpetrated during outbreaks. By implementing both short-term protective measures and long-term structural reforms, outbreak responses may not only break the cycle of VAWG exacerbated by public health emergencies but build resilient systems that protect women, girls and marginalised populations before, during and after crises.
PMID:42086298 | DOI:10.1136/bmjgh-2025-020982
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