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Gender-Based Power and Couples’ HIV Risk In Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand, North India

Alpna Agrawal Shelah S. Bloom Chirayath Suchindran Siân Curtis Gustavo Angeles

First published online:

Abstract / Summary
CONTEXT

Gender inequality is a long-recognized driver of the HIV epidemic. However, few studies have investigated the association between gender-based power and HIV risk in India, which has the world’s third largest HIV epidemic.

METHODS

Population-based data collected in 2003 from 3,385 couples residing in Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand, North India, were used to examine associations between gender-based power (wife’s autonomy and husband’s inequitable gender attitudes) and indicators of couples’ HIV risk (whether the husband had had premarital sex with someone other than his eventual spouse, extramarital sex in the past year or STI symptoms in the past year). Structural equation modeling was used to create composite variables for the gender-based power measures and test their associations with HIV risk measures.

RESULTS

Twenty-four percent of husbands had had premarital sex, 7% had had extramarital sex in the past year and 6% had had STI symptoms in the past year. Structural equation models indicated that wives who reported higher levels of autonomy were less likely than other wives to have husbands who had had extramarital sex in the past year (direct association) or STI symptoms in the past year (indirect association). Moreover, husbands who endorsed more inequitable gender attitudes were more likely than others to report having had premarital sex with someone other than their spouse, which in turn was associated with having had extramarital sex and STI symptoms in the past year.

CONCLUSIONS

If the associations identified in this study reflect a causal relationship between gender-based power and HIV risk behavior, then HIV prevention programs that successfully address inequitable gender roles may reduce HIV risks in North India.

International Perspectives on Sexual and Reproductive Health, 2014, 40(4):196–205, doi: 10.1363/4019614

In the context of the HIV epidemic, gender-based power refers to power differentials—such as women’s subordination and men’s control over decision making, including in sexual relationships—that directly or indirectly influence women’s and men’s susceptibility to HIV.1 The World Health Organization, the Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS and the (U.S.) President’s Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief state that gender-based power plays a critical role worldwide in driving the spread of HIV.2–4

Although HIV programs have sought, since the late 1980s, to address gender dynamics that contribute to risky sexual behavior, recent research and policy initiatives have called for HIV programs to explicitly reduce gender inequality.1,3 International agencies recommend making gender issues a standard component of HIV prevention programs and analyzing study results by gender to "generate better evidence and increased understanding of the specific needs of women and girls in the context of HIV."4

Globally, India ranks third, after South Africa and Nigeria, in the number of people living with HIV.5 Men’s risky sexual behaviors—including premarital sex, extramarital sex and transactional sex, all of which are frequently unprotected—play a substantial role in the spread of HIV and other STIs in the subcontinent,6–9 and result in the transmission of the virus to women who otherwise would have little or no risk of infection.9,10 Although gender inequity has been linked to HIV risk in India,11 empirical evidence of the relationship between gender-based power and HIV risk is limited, particularly for North India, where most HIV research has focused on high-risk populations rather than on gender dynamics.7,12 However, research in the United States, Sub-Saharan Africa and South America has shown that gender inequity is associated with high-risk sex, infrequent condom use, STI symptoms and sexual violence.13,14

The current study investigated the relationship between gender-based power and HIV risk among couples in Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand (the former hill region of Uttar Pradesh), North India. Fewer HIV studies have focused on North India than on South India.15 Uttar Pradesh has 199 million inhabitants and is India’s most populous state;16 only five countries in the world have larger populations.17 Although the prevalence of HIV in Uttar Pradesh is low (0.07%), the state is considered "highly vulnerable" to HIV spread because of its poor performance on indicators of health, development and gender equity (e.g., women’s education, age at marriage, gender-based violence).18 In addition, Uttar Pradesh’s levels of sex trafficking and interstate migration—both of which are associated with HIV spread in India—are among the highest in the country.19 According to estimates by the National AIDS Control Organisation, rates of HIV transmission have increased in Uttar Pradesh, and North India accounted for 41% of new HIV infections nationally in 2008–2009.20

Conceptual Model

The current study was informed by Wingood and DiClemente’s application of Connell’s theory of gender and power to HIV risks.1 According to this theory, relationships between men and women are characterized by three social structures: sexual division of labor, which pertains to economic inequality; sexual division of power, which refers to an individual’s ability to act, change or have power over others; and cathexis, which concerns the norms, attitudes and beliefs related to society’s expectations of men and women. HIV studies that have applied this theory have shown that women who experience imbalances in gender-based power are at elevated risk for HIV.1,21–24

The theory of gender and power was a logical choice to guide this study in light of the inequitable gender practices in India and their potential role in the spread of HIV. Nationally, 37% of ever-married Indian women report having been physically or sexually abused by their husband, and 54% believe it is justifiable for husbands to beat their wife.18 In India, most women who become infected with HIV do so through heterosexual sex with their husband.9,10,25 In the current study, we examined wife’s autonomy and husband’s inequitable gender attitudes—which are related to sexual division of power and cathexis, respectively, in the theory of gender and power—because they may be directly related to relationship power and, in turn, HIV risk. Generally, women’s autonomy is associated with improved reproductive and sexual health, while men’s inequitable attitudes toward women are associated with sexual health risks.26–29

METHODS

Study Population

This study was part of a larger project, funded by the U.S. National Institute for Child Health and Human Development, that explored the potential for the spread of HIV in North India. The data were collected from January to July 2003 from a probability sample of 3,385 married couples residing in Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand, and the sample is representative of couples living in major urban cities and rural areas in these states.

A multistage cluster sampling design was used to obtain the sample. Women were eligible to be interviewed if they were married, living with their spouse and aged 15–49. Husbands of participating wives were also interviewed. In total, interviewers visited 3,324 households and completed interviews with 3,501 of the 3,588 eligible wives; 76 wives could not be reached and 11 refused to be interviewed. In addition, interviews were completed with 3,412 of the 3,588 eligible husbands; 130 husbands could not be contacted and 46 refused to be interviewed. Husbands and wives whose spouse was not interviewed were excluded from our analysis; 27 other couples were excluded because of missing or inconsistent data on key variables. The final analytic sample consisted of 3,385 couples.

Informed consent was obtained from both spouses and the head of the household (if other than the husband or wife). All questionnaires were translated into colloquial Hindi and administered in this language. Data entry was carried out using EPINFO software.

A household interview was conducted with the head of the sampled household or another informed adult member and collected information on the household’s standard of living. The individual interviews for wives and husbands included questions on social and demographic characteristics, substance use, work mobility, self-reported STI symptoms and gender norms. The husbands’ survey also solicited information on premarital and extramarital sexual behavior, using a standard partner history for the man’s last three partners in the past 12 months. This information was collected only from husbands because preliminary work for this study indicated that cultural norms and personal safety issues precluded asking wives about extramarital sexual behavior.30 Data on husbands’ responses were linked to data on wives’ responses.

Study approval was obtained from the internal review board of the Indian Council of Medical Research in India and from the Public Health–Nursing Internal Review Board at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

 

Measures

•Couple’s HIV risk. Husbands were asked whether they had engaged in premarital sex with someone other than their current wife, had had extramarital sex in the past year or had had any STI symptoms (specifically penile discharge or penile ulcers) in the past year. We included premarital sex because in India it has been linked to extramarital sex as well as to HIV infection.6

•Gender-based power. Gender-based power was captured using measures of wife’s autonomy and husband’s inequitable gender attitudes. Autonomy was measured using a total of 15 items that, in accordance with previous research,31 asked wives about their level of interpersonal control in multiple dimensions: finances, household decision making, mobility and leniency. In the finances dimension, wives were asked whether they could spend money on four types of items: a small present; kitchen pots; jewelry; and an almari (cabinet), bed or fan. In the realm of household decision making, four items assessed whether wives participated in decisions about buying food, clothes, kitchen items and major household items. For the mobility dimension, three items asked whether wives could go alone to a health facility, the nearby home of a friend or relative, or a nearby bazaar. Finally, for the leniency dimension, wives were asked if they needed permission to go to a market, a nearby friend’s or relative’s home, a wedding or a health facility. Women responded to these items using a three- or four-point Likert scale; responses were recoded so that higher scores indicated higher levels of autonomy.

Our measure of inequitable gender attitudes assessed husbands’ attitudes toward wives acting independently. The three items were drawn from qualitative research with husbands in the study sample.32Husbands were asked to rate their level of agreement with the following statements: There is no harm if a wife sometimes disobeys her husband; a wife should always consult her husband before making decisions, large or small; and there is no harm if a wife goes out alone to the nearby house of a friend or relative. Men responded to these statements using a four-point scale that ranged from "strongly agree" to "strongly disagree"; responses were recoded as either "agree" or "disagree." In addition, responses to the first and third items were recoded so that a higher score indicated that husbands endorsed more inequitable gender attitudes.

•Covariates. Covariates included in our analyses were age, educational level, household standard of living, area of residence, region, husband’s recent substance use and mobility of husband’s work. Age was categorized as 15–24, 25–29, 30–39 or 40 or older; education as none, 1–8 years, 9–12 years or 13 or more years. We classified household standard of living as low, medium or high according to an index, developed for previous population-based surveys in India,18 that is based on ownership of certain items, vehicles, animals, land and other assets. Area of residence was characterized as urban or rural. Region of residence was categorized as western, central, Bundelkhand, eastern or Uttarakhand, and was included because HIV risk and prevalence vary by geography in Uttar Pradesh.19

Our measure of recent substance use indicated whether a husband reported having used alcohol or marijuana (eaten in the form of bhang) during the past two weeks. Husband’s mobility was a binary variable that indicated whether the husband had slept away from home because of work at least one night in the past four weeks or for more than two consecutive weeks in the past year. Substance use and mobility were included in our analyses because they are associated with HIV risk in India.7,19

 

Analytic Plan

We used structural equation modeling to identify direct and indirect associations between gender-based power measures and HIV risk indicators (whether the husband had had premarital sex, had had extramarital sex in the past year or had had STI symptoms in the past year). Although structural equation models are typically used to test hypothesized direct causal relationships between variables (as well as indirect associations, mediated through one or more other variables, that take into account covariance patterns among variables), they do not establish causality, but rather only indicate associations among variables.33,34 In this study, an advantage to using structural equation modeling was that it allowed us to model the gender-based power measures as separate factors while evaluating their associations with HIV risk in a single model, an approach we considered appropriate given that the three structures of the theory of gender and power have been described as being distinct, yet related, and as collectively influencing HIV risks.1 On the basis of previous research, we hypothesized that a wife’s autonomy would be negatively associated with HIV risk, and that a husband’s inequitable gender attitudes would be positively associated with HIV risk.

Modeling followed a two-step process. First, we performed confirmatory factor analyses to construct composite factors for the gender-based power measures. To estimate the factor for wife’s autonomy, we performed first- and second-order confirmatory factor analyses assessing the measure’s reliability and validity. The first-order factor model allowed us to test covariance among items for each dimension of wife’s autonomy; the second-order factor model allowed us to test covariance among the four dimensions of wife’s autonomy. The three survey items measuring husband’s inequitable gender attitudes were modeled on a single factor.

Next, we specified a structural equation model to test the hypothesized relationships between gender-based power and HIV risk indicators while adjusting for covariates. Because the gender-based power measures were categorical, we estimated the parameters by weighted least-squares using robust standard errors and mean- and variance-adjusted chi-square test statistics (previous work has shown that this approach can be used with categorical variables35). Standard errors were adjusted for clustering. Because the quantity of missing data was small, we used listwise deletion. We report standardized beta estimates for all direct, indirect and total effects.*

To evaluate model fit in the confirmatory and structural equation models, we used three indices: the comparative fit index (CFI), the Tucker-Lewis index (TLI) and the root mean square error of approximation (RMSEA). Models are generally considered to have adequate fit if scores on the first two indices are greater than 0.9 and that on the last is 0.06 or less.35 Descriptive analyses were performed in Stata 10.0, and structural equation modeling was conducted in Mplus version 5.0.

 

RESULTS

Sample Characteristics

Twenty-two percent of wives were younger than 24, compared with 8% of husbands (Table 1), and wives were twice as likely as husbands to have no formal education (46% vs. 22%). Almost one-third (30%) of husbands had used alcohol or marijuana in the past two weeks, and one in seven (14%) were categorized as mobile.

Wife’s level of autonomy varied across dimensions. Table 1 presents a representative selection of the autonomy measures. For example, 10% of wives said that they could always spend money on small presents (finances dimension), 38% could always participate in buying clothes (decision making), 34% could visit a nearby bazaar alone (mobility) and 5% never needed permission to visit a health facility when sick (leniency).

Inequitable gender attitudes were pervasive among husbands. The majority of husbands felt that wives should consult their spouse on any decision, large or small (83%); three-fifths said that a wife should not disobey her husband’s instructions (58%); and almost half indicated that a wife should not go out alone to visit a nearby friend or relative (48%).

One in four husbands (24%) had had premarital sex with someone other than their current wife. Smaller proportions of husbands reported having had extramarital sex (7%) or STI symptoms (6%) in the past year.

 

Confirmatory Factor Analysis

In the first-order confirmatory factor model for wife’s autonomy, the standardized factor loadings of each dimension’s respective indictors ranged from 0.7 to 0.9 (p<.001) and demonstrated adequate model fit (RMSEA=0.06, CFI=0.96, TLI=0.97). For the second-order factor of the wife’s autonomy items, the standardized factor loadings of each dimension ranged from 0.4 to 0.9 (p<.001), and the overall model fit was adequate (RMSEA=0.06, CFI=0.94, TLI=0.96). For the husband’s inequitable gender attitudes factor, the standardized factor loadings for the three indictors ranged from 0.3 to 0.9 (p<.001). The wife’s autonomy factor was not significantly correlated with the husband’s inequitable gender attitudes factor (p=0.41).

 

Multivariate Structural Equation Model

The fit indices of the structural equation model indicated good fit (Figure 1).

•Associations of covariates with gender-based power. Wives aged 25–29, 30–39, or 40 or older reported higher levels of autonomy than did wives aged 15–24 (Table 2). In addition, wives with at least nine years of education reported higher levels of autonomy than did wives with no education. Among husbands, recent substance use was negatively associated with inequitable gender attitudes.

•Associations of covariates with indicators of HIV risk. Husbands with higher levels of education tended to be less likely to report premarital sex, extramarital sex and STI symptoms than were husbands with no education. Husbands in households with a medium or high standard of living were less likely to report premarital sex than were those with a low standard of living.

Husbands who reported recent substance use had an elevated likelihood of reporting premarital sex and extramarital sex in the past year. Husbands who had made overnight trips for work were more likely than those who had not been away from home to report having had premarital sex with a woman other than their eventual wife and having had extramarital sex in the past year.

•Associations between HIV risk indicators. HIV risk indicators reported by husbands were positively associated with each other after adjustment for covariates (Figure 1). A husband’s having had premarital sex was directly and positively associated with having had extramarital sex in the past year (coefficient, 0.64), and indirectly and positively associated with having had STI symptoms in the past year (0.24, p<.001; not shown). In addition, a husband’s having had extramarital sex in the past year was directly and positively associated with having had STI symptoms in the past year (0.36; Figure 1).

•Associations of gender-based power with HIV risk indicators. Wife’s autonomy was directly and negatively associated with husband’s having had extramarital sex in the past year (coefficient, –0.12). A negative association was apparent between wife’s autonomy and husband’s having had STI symptoms in the past year (–0.04 indirect effect and –0.15 total effect; not shown). A direct association between wife’s autonomy and a husband’s STI symptoms was marginally significant (–0.11, p=.06).

Husband’s inequitable gender attitudes were directly and positively associated with his having had premarital sex (coefficient, 0.13; Figure 1). In addition, husband’s inequitable gender attitudes were indirectly and positively associated with his having had extramarital sex in the past year and having had STI symptoms in the past year (0.08 and 0.03, respectively; not shown).

 

DISCUSSION

Our analysis of data from a population-based sample of 3,385 couples in North India showed that gender-based differences in power were associated with indicators of HIV risk. The findings concerning a wife’s autonomy complement previous research in India showing that autonomy is associated with measures of reproductive health, such as antenatal care utilization, family planning access, contraceptive use and child health.27,36 However, few studies have considered the role of autonomy with respect to HIV risk. Studies to date suggest that autonomy may facilitate HIV prevention and risk reduction. In Uttar Pradesh, a wife’s autonomy was positively correlated with her awareness of HIV and condom use.28 A multistate analysis in India showed a negative association between a woman’s autonomy and initiation of marital violence by her husband, an emerging HIV risk factor.37,38 We extend the current literature by demonstrating direct and indirect negative associations between a wife’s autonomy and indicators of HIV risk. A potential explanation for these findings is that higher levels of autonomy are associated with good relationship quality and spousal communication, which may reduce the likelihood that a husband has extramarital sex. Allendorf and colleagues observed that in Central India, a wife’s autonomy was associated with her having fewer disagreements with her husband and with her husband prioritizing her over his parents.39 Another possible explanation for our findings is that women with higher levels of autonomy tend to marry men who do not engage in extramarital sex, though it is worth noting that the majority of marriages in India, especially in the North, are arranged by families.40

Our findings are consistent with the growing body of literature in India and elsewhere showing that among men, inequitable gender attitudes are associated with risky sexual behavior.8,11,24,41 A national study in India found that married and unmarried men who reported having had contact with a commercial sex worker in the past year were more likely than other men to express attitudes supporting sexual entitlement and wife abuse.8 A study of young Indian men showed that inequitable gender norms were associated with having had multiple sex partners, having symptoms of poor sexual health, having been physically or sexually violent with one’s partner and using condoms less frequently.11 Research in China found that male adolescents with permissive attitudes regarding premarital sex had an elevated likelihood of holding inequitable gender-role attitudes.42 A potential explanation for our study findings is that cultural values surrounding masculinity may encourage risky sexual practices before and during marriage.26 In a qualitative study in India, young men described a "real man" (or asli mard) as being dominant and aggressive, and characterized women as chhav, an object or item to be possessed. Study participants indicated that verbal aggression, forced kissing and forced sex with women were acceptable, and that condom use was unnecessary even if they had multiple sex partners.43

Contrary to our expectations, we did not find a negative correlation (or any correlation) between a wife’s autonomy and her husband’s having inequitable gender attitudes. This lack of an association warrants further study, but it may be due to measurement issues or to conceptual differences between these measures. For example, the autonomy measure was asked of wives and encompassed a broad range of items, while the inequitable gender attitudes measure relied on the husband’s responses and consisted of a few items that were relatively narrow in scope. Alternatively, the lack of correlation between these measures may be attributable to conflicting perceptions of gender relations between husbands and wives; a study among couples in Uttar Pradesh found that spouses’ responses to the same autonomy items were only weakly associated, and that husbands’ perceptions of their wives’ autonomy were more strongly related to their wives’ contraceptive use than were the wives’ perception of their own autonomy.44

The finding that a wife’s education and a couple’s standard of living were positively associated with the wife’s autonomy is consistent with previous research.36 However, a husband’s education and a couple’s standard of living were not associated with a husband’s inequitable gender attitudes, a finding that may reflect the ubiquity of these beliefs across socioeconomic classes in North India.

This study had several limitations. Because the data were collected in 2003, they may not capture current gender dynamics and HIV risks among couples in North India. However, to our knowledge, no study of this magnitude focusing on gender and HIV has been conducted in North India to date; many population-based studies, for example, have lacked detailed items on autonomy and gender attitudes. Moreover, trends in gender disparities and HIV prevalence suggest that our findings remain relevant and informative. In India, selective abortion of female fetuses increased markedly from 1980 to 2011, and among women aged 15–49 the median age at first marriage rose by less than a year from 1992 to 2006.45,46 National estimates showed that HIV prevalence stabilized or decreased in India’s southern states from 2002 to 2007, but increased in some northern states.20,47

Other limitations of the study include its cross-sectional design, which precluded assessment of the direction of the associations we observed. Information on sexual behavior and STI symptoms was self-reported and thus susceptible to social desirability bias and misspecification errors. For instance, husbands may have underreported undesirable sexual behaviors and sexual health symptoms, and self- reported STI symptoms may have been nonspecific and due to causes other than STIs. Finally, the scale of inequitable gender attitudes may not be generalizable to other settings, since it was validated for our study population only.

Study strengths include the focused study design, our use of data that linked a husband’s responses to his wife’s, and the novel methodologies employed. Unlike other population-based surveys conducted in India, our survey collected data for the explicit purpose of investigating gender and HIV risks. In addition, members of the study team were from Uttar Pradesh, had experience with HIV risk factors in the region or both. These aspects of the study design potentially enhanced the quality of our data. Previous reports suggest that regional, focused studies elicit higher disclosure rates, particularly of sensitive information, than do large-scale, broad surveys.48,49 The study methods were unique because we examined both positive manifestations of gender-based power (autonomy) and negative manifestations of such power (inequitable gender attitudes) with respect to HIV risk, and structural equation modeling enabled us to estimate these associations simultaneously. For example, associations between a wife’s autonomy and the couple’s HIV risk were adjusted for associations between the husband’s inequitable gender attitudes and HIV risk, and vice versa. Moreover, by using structural equation modeling, we were able to take into account correlated responses and error terms between spouses.

If our results reflect causal relationships between gender-based power and HIV risk, they suggest that HIV prevention programs in North India should address gender inequity as well as high risk behaviors in the general population. Thus far, gender transformative HIV interventions, which focus on modifying gender roles in order to promote more gender-equitable relationships, have demonstrated promise at the individual level, resulting in reduction of HIV risk, but community-level interventions have yielded mixed results.29,50–52 Our findings suggest ways to expand current research on gender-based power and HIV risk that may inform international and regional agencies’ work at the community level. First, we found that examining multiple measures of gender-based power in a single study is worthwhile. This approach has the potential not only to capture a rich picture of the gender context in a study setting, but also to help identify gender dynamics that may conflict with HIV risk-reduction programs. Previous studies have shown that equitable and inequitable gender attitudes may coexist.53 A study in the Philippines found a U-shaped association between intimate partner violence and couples’ decision making: Domination of decision making by either the husband or the wife was associated with elevated levels of marital violence, while joint decision making was associated with the lowest levels of marital violence.54 In South India, an evaluation of Stepping Stones, a training program that focuses on HIV awareness and promotion of relationship skills, found that residents of villages where the program was implemented expressed higher levels of equitable gender attitudes than did residents of other villages, but that regressive gender attitudes persisted one to three years after the intervention. Compared with the general population, residents of Stepping Stones villages were less likely to believe that "women should be blamed for spreading AIDS," but equally likely to agree that "raped women are usually at fault."52 Therefore, future research should consider examining multiple measures of gender-based power and the interplay between these measures with respect to HIV risks. Measures related to sexual norms, cultural values and autonomy may be particularly informative.22,28,38,55

Second, studies that use community-level data, longitudinal designs and couple models to examine gender-based power and HIV risk are needed. Our findings, and those from emergent research, suggest the value of these approaches. A multilevel analysis of data from eight African countries showed that husbands residing in communities that supported wife-beating were more likely than other husbands to report engaging in risky extramarital sex.41 A study in four Indian states demonstrated that increases in women’s autonomy (specifically freedom of movement) between 1998–1999 and 2002–2003 were associated with a reduced risk of marital violence initiation.38 Our study found that couples’ gender dynamics were associated with HIV risk, and suggests that gender issues are important to consider in contexts where HIV spread is driven by husbands’ high-risk, extramarital sexual behaviors. Although a meta-analysis of 29 couple-based HIV interventions revealed that the interventions increased condom use and reduced partner concurrency, few of the studies had explicitly addressed gender-based power at the couple level.56 Most HIV-related interventions that address gender issues are conducted either only with men or only with women.29

In conclusion, our findings add to the evidence linking gender-based power and HIV risk, though more research is needed to understand this association and to improve the efficacy of interventions that address gender issues at the community level. Future research in this area should assess the potential benefits of using multiple measures of gender inequity and employ innovative study designs. These approaches may inform the international agenda to make gender issues a standard component of HIV programs and facilitate community level change in India and other countries.

 

Footnotes

*We use the word “effect” in accordance with standard structural equation modeling terminology. However, as we noted earlier, the technique cannot prove a causal relationship.

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Author's Affiliations

Alpna Agrawal is a medical student, School of Medicine, University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, USA. Shelah S. Bloom is research assistant professor, and Siân Curtis is research associate professor, Department of Maternal and Child Health; Chirayath Suchindran is professor, Department of Biostatistics; and Gustavo Angeles is research assistant professor, Department of Maternal and Child Development—all at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, USA.

Acknowledgments

The authors acknowledge support from the National Institute for Child Health and Human Development (grant NIH-NICHD T32-HD07168 to the Carolina Population Center) and the National Institute of Mental Health (grant NIH-NIMH T32MH020031). They thank Kaushalendra K. Singh and staff at Banaras Hindu University, Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh, who headed the data collection team in Uttar Pradesh. The content of this article is the responsibility solely of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health.

Author contact: [email protected]

Disclaimer

The views expressed in this publication do not necessarily reflect those of the Guttmacher Institute.