Background: Global evidence shows that men’s harmful alcohol use contributes to intimate partner violence (IPV) and other harms. Yet, interventions that target alcohol-related harms to women are scarce. Quantitative analyses demonstrate links with physical and verbal aggression; however, the specific harms to women from men’s drinking have not been well articulated, particularly from an international perspective. Aim: To document the breadth and nature of harms and impact of men’s drinking on women. Methods: A narrative review, using inductive analysis, was conducted of peer-reviewed qualitative studies that: (a) focused on alcohol (men’s drinking), (b) featured women as primary victims, (c) encompassed direct/indirect harms, and (d) explicitly featured alcohol in the qualitative results. Papers were selected following a non-time-limited systematic search of key scholarly databases. Results: Thirty papers were included in this review. The majority of studies were conducted in low- to middle-income countries. The harms in the studies were collated and organised under three main themes: (i) harmful alcohol-related actions by men (e.g. violence, sexual coercion, economic abuse), (ii) impact on women (e.g. physical and mental health harm, relationship functioning, social harm), and (iii) how partner alcohol use was framed by women in the studies. Conclusion: Men’s drinking results in a multitude of direct, indirect and hidden harms to women that are cumulative, intersecting and entrench women’s disempowerment. An explicit gendered lens is needed in prevention efforts to target men’s drinking and the impact on women, to improve health and social outcomes for women worldwide.
Funding
LR's time on this project was supported by the Gender and Health Research Unit, South African Medical Research Council. AML's, AT's and BW's work were funded by the Australian Research Council [LP190100698]. AML's salary was funded by veski (Victorian Health and Medical Research Workforce Project under auspices of the Victorian Government and the Association of Australian Medical Research Institutes with funding provided by the Victorian Department of Jobs, Precincts and Regions), and the National Health and Medical Research Council [#2016706]. The collaborative initiative was partially funded by the Strengthening Networks and Technical Capacity for Alcohol Policy Development Project (under WHO SEARO-Thai Health Promotion Foundation collaboration) through the International Health Policy Program Foundation.