Acceptability of doctors routinely asking women about violence genvio_att_pmeas_hist__fra_doc_vio

Time format:
Years
Unit:
Percentage (comparable)
Description:

The results in this table are based on women's self-reported experiences with violence, as recorded by EU FRA's survey on violence against women. The data were collected by means of face‑to‑face interviews with 42,000 women in all 28 EU Member States, with on average 1,500 interviews per Member State. The respondents were selected based on random sampling. The results are representative of the experiences and opinions of women who are 18 to 74 years old and live in the EU.

In addition to actual differences in victimisation rates, differences in self-reported prevalence of violence can reflect a number of other factors, such as whether it is culturally acceptable to talk with other people about experiences of violence against women, including survey interviewers. It is possible that enhanced gender equality in a country could lead to higher levels of disclosure about violence against women, since incidents are more likely to be openly addressed and challenged in societies with enhanced equality.

EU28
BE
BG
CZ
DK
DE
EE
IE
EL
ES
FR
HR
IT
CY
LV
LT
LU
HU
MT
NL
AT
PL
PT
RO
SI
SK
FI
SE
UK
2012
EU28
87
BE
93
BG
77
CZ
65
DK
92
DE
83
EE
90
IE
94
EL
89
ES
93
FR
95
HR
91
IT
87
CY
89
LV
77
LT
74
LU
94
HU
86
MT
97
NL
92
AT
82
PL
75
PT
97
RO
85
SI
90
SK
77
FI
97
SE
91
UK
90

Available flags:

b break in time series c confidential
d definition differs, see metadata e estimated
f forecast i see metadata
m imputed n not significant
p provisional r revised
s Eurostat estimate u low reliability
x dropped due to insufficient sample size y unreliable due to small sample size
z not applicable