GYNVEPI is a 5-year project funded by the European Research Council (ERC Starting Grant, 2024-2029). It will lay the foundations of an epidemiology of gynaecological violence (GV). GV refers to sub-optimal experiences of care that can be perceived as abusive or dehumanising (e.g. non-consented medical acts, discrimination). Understood as a structural and gendered form of violence, it is a phenomenon that is yet to be fully defined and investigated: in contrast to the neighbouring field of obstetric violence, it has not been researched.
Taking Germany as an exemplary setting, GYNVEPI aims at understanding the who, the when, the how, and the health consequences of people’s experiences of GV. Through an innovative, intersectional, gender-expansive and gender-transformative approach to social epidemiology, it will provide a definition, a framework and a quantitative, validated instrument for the study of GV. At the core of GYNVEPI are the experiences and perceptions of those who are exposed to GV: they will be at the center of all research endeavours within the project.
We will implement a mixed-methods and interdisciplinary approach to ensure the depth and strength of the findings. Drawing on concepts and perspectives from sociology, gender studies, and social epidemiology, the team will carry out reviews, expert workshops, focus groups, interviews, and an online survey. We will also design and moderate a digital platform aimed at fostering exchanges and information dissemination.
GYNVEPI is important: gynaecological care constitutes in many countries the first point of contact for gynaecological, sexual, and reproductive health. Women, but also non-binary, trans and intersex persons using gynaecological services, are exposed throughout their life to the risk of GV, and its toll is assumed to be large, with consequences in the short- to long-term on mental, physical, social and sexual health.
GYNVEPI is timely: the momentum of obstetric violence research provides a good starting point to reflect on GV; testimonies of GV outside the scientific arena urge researchers to grasp the topic; digital tools and participation enable to collect effectively and quickly experiences of care users, including among minoritised groups.
GYNVEPI will generate new knowledge on GV and its associations with health. Its gender-transformative component will initiate a transformation of harmful gender norms through reciprocal empowerment among the researchers and “researched”. Lastly, the methodological approach will be applicable in further studies, e.g. longitudinal studies and GV studies in other countries.
E-Mail: gynvepi@uni-bielefeld.de