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Table 5 Combined model of men’s and women’s significant attitudinal and normative predictors of women’s reported IPV

From: Associations of attitudes and social norms with experiences of intimate partner violence among married adolescents and their husbands in rural Niger: a dyadic cross-sectional study

 

Combined model

 

Beta

SE

P-value

Wife’s IPV acceptance (binary)

1.13

0.34

0.001

Husband’s VAWSB second order social beliefs (Ref: No)

   

VAWSB second order social beliefs—yes

0.73

0.31

0.017

VAWSB second order social beliefs—doesn’t know

0.64

0.48

0.181

Wife’s GRSB scale (0–7)

0.42

0.15

0.017

Wife’s age (13–19)

− 0.02

0.11

0.883

Husband’s age (15–53)

0.01

0.03

0.771

Wife’s education (0–3)

− 0.33

0.19

0.083

Husband’s education (0–3)

− 0.01

0.16

0.942

Wife’s Quranic schooling (yes vs no)

− 0.30

0.32

0.348

Husband’s Quranic schooling (yes vs no)

0.30

0.28

0.281

Wife’s age at marriage (10–19)

− 0.07

0.09

0.470

Household assets (0–6)

− 0.22

0.12

0.058

Food insecurity (yes vs no)

0.14

0.30

0.635

Wife’s agricultural labor (yes vs no)

− 0.80

0.31

0.010

Number of children (0–5)

0.17

0.18

0.332

Live with extended family (yes vs no)

− 0.49

0.39

0.210

Husband number of wives (0–4)

− 0.61

0.48

0.210

Tribe Zarma (Ref: Hausa)

1.02

0.67

0.130

Tribe Tuareg (Ref: Hausa)

0.74

1.22

0.545

District Doutchi (Ref: Dosso)

0.96

0.67

0.153

District Loga (Ref: Dosso)

− 0.70

0.34

0.037

  1. Bolded items fall below the cut-off of p < 0.10 and are carried forward into the next model