Audio By Carbonatix
Nearly half of women in some districts across Ghana are exposed to domestic violence, with the Central Region emerging as the country’s highest-risk area. This is according to the latest District-Level Small Area Estimation findings released by the Ghana Statistical Service (GSS), based on data from the 2022 Ghana Demographic and Health Survey and the 2021 Population and Housing Census.
The Central Region recorded the highest prevalence of physical violence at 44.6%, followed by Savannah (42.9%) and Volta (40.2%).
The Volta Region also posted the highest levels of sexual violence at 22.3%, significantly above the national pattern. It was followed by the Central and Savannah Regions at 19.6% each, while the North East Region recorded the lowest incidence at 5.2%.
The analysis reveals extreme district-level disparities. Sawla-Tuna-Kalba in the Savannah Region recorded the most alarming figure nationwide, with 61.9% of women aged 15–49 estimated to have experienced at least one form of domestic violence — physical, emotional or sexual.
In contrast, districts in Bono, Bono East, Upper West and North East Regions recorded far lower levels of physical violence, some falling below 25%, underscoring significant protection gaps across the country.
The GSS report emphasises that protecting women in high-risk areas requires a deliberate shift toward district-specific interventions, particularly in the Central, Volta and Savannah Regions where prevalence is most severe.
It stresses the need to strengthen key institutions such as the Domestic Violence and Victims Support Unit (DOVVSU), family courts and district gender desks, urging that they be adequately staffed and resourced to respond effectively to rising cases.
The Service further recommends that the government integrate these new district estimates into local planning and budgeting processes to ensure that resources and interventions target the communities at highest risk.
Additionally, the GSS calls for deeper collaboration with traditional and religious leaders to challenge entrenched social norms that fuel domestic violence and discourage reporting.
Latest Stories
-
Last Gallop: The rise, fall and fight for Horse Racing in Ghana
2 minutes -
Communications Minister launches Ghana Climate Atlas to strengthen planning and climate resilience
4 minutes -
Maintain credibility, reduce commentary — NDC elections director advises Mussa Dankwah
10 minutes -
NDPC urges time discipline and stronger systems to accelerate Ghana’s development
12 minutes -
AU’s legal path to UN slavery resolution not strong enough – Prof Appiagyei-Atua
13 minutes -
Ghana Boundary Commission flags damaged pillars and development gaps in Bono Border communities
16 minutes -
Enforcing UN slavery resolution will be difficult — Prof Appiagyei-Atua
18 minutes -
Ghana, UK deepen education ties as Haruna Iddrisu meets British High Commissioner
19 minutes -
Students urged to lead climate action through Ghana Green Scholars Programme
23 minutes -
IMANI Brief: When service to nation becomes opportunities for sale
30 minutes -
‘We want to make a statement’ – Semenyo on Austria friendly
37 minutes -
Kasa Properties engages Accra Regional Minister ahead of Prime Accra launch on March 31
39 minutes -
Youth delegates meet in Accra to develop action plan to counter emerging security threats
45 minutes -
Sustained higher oil prices to add to cross-sector credit pressure – Fitch
54 minutes -
Right Accountability Network Africa calls for independent probe into alleged assault on Ibrahim Mahama
1 hour
