Dube Shanta R, Anda Robert F, Whitfield Charles L, Brown David W, Felitti Vincent J, Dong Maxia, Giles Wayne H
National Center for Chronic Disease Prevention and Health Promotion, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, Atlanta, Georgia 30341-3724, USA.
Am J Prev Med. 2005 Jun;28(5):430-8. doi: 10.1016/j.amepre.2005.01.015.
Childhood sexual abuse (CSA) is a worldwide problem. Although most studies on the long-term consequences of CSA have focused on women, sexual abuse of both boys and girls is common. Thus, a comparison of the long-term effects of CSA by gender of the victim will provide perspective on the need for future research, prevention activities, and treatment of survivors.
A retrospective cohort study was conducted from 1995 to 1997 among 17,337 adult HMO members in San Diego, California. Participants completed a survey about abuse or household dysfunction during childhood, and multiple other health-related issues. Multivariate logistic regression was used to examine the relationships between severity of CSA (intercourse vs no intercourse) and long-term health and social problems (substance use and abuse, mental illness, and current problems with marriage and family) by gender of victim. Models controlled for exposure to other forms of adverse childhood experiences that co-occur with CSA. Among men, the relationship between the gender of the CSA perpetrator to the outcomes was also examined.
Contact CSA was reported by 16% of males and 25% of females. Men reported female perpetration of CSA nearly 40% of the time, and women reported female perpetration of CSA 6% of the time. CSA significantly increased the risk of the outcomes. The magnitude of the increase was similar for men and women. For example, compared to reporting no sexual abuse, a history of suicide attempt was more than twice as likely among both men and women who experienced CSA (p<0.05). Compared with those who did not report CSA, men and women exposed to CSA were at a 40% increased risk of marrying an alcoholic, and a 40% to 50% increased risk of reporting current problems with their marriage (p<0.05).
In this cohort of adult HMO members, experiencing CSA was common among both men and women. The long-term impact of CSA on multiple health and social problems was similar for both men and women. These findings strongly indicate that boys and girls are vulnerable to this form of childhood maltreatment; the similarity in the likelihood for multiple behavioral, mental, and social outcomes among men and women suggests the need to identify and treat all adults affected by CSA.
儿童期性虐待(CSA)是一个全球性问题。尽管大多数关于CSA长期后果的研究都集中在女性身上,但男孩和女孩遭受性虐待的情况都很常见。因此,按受害者性别比较CSA的长期影响将为未来研究、预防活动及幸存者治疗的必要性提供视角。
1995年至1997年,在加利福尼亚州圣地亚哥的17337名成年健康维护组织(HMO)成员中进行了一项回顾性队列研究。参与者完成了一项关于童年期虐待或家庭功能失调以及其他多个与健康相关问题的调查。采用多变量逻辑回归分析,按受害者性别研究CSA严重程度(有性交与无性交)与长期健康和社会问题(物质使用与滥用、精神疾病以及当前婚姻和家庭问题)之间的关系。模型对与CSA同时发生的其他形式童年不良经历的暴露情况进行了控制。在男性中,还研究了CSA施虐者性别与结果之间的关系。
16%的男性和25%的女性报告有过接触性CSA。男性报告CSA由女性实施的情况占近40%,而女性报告CSA由女性实施的情况占6%。CSA显著增加了出现这些结果的风险。男性和女性增加的幅度相似。例如,与未报告遭受性虐待的人相比,经历过CSA的男性和女性自杀未遂史的可能性是其两倍多(p<0.05)。与未报告CSA的人相比,遭受CSA的男性和女性与酗酒者结婚的风险增加40%,报告当前婚姻问题的风险增加40%至50%(p<0.05)。
在这个成年HMO成员队列中,男性和女性经历CSA的情况都很常见。CSA对多种健康和社会问题的长期影响在男性和女性中相似。这些发现有力地表明,男孩和女孩都容易遭受这种形式的童年虐待;男性和女性在多种行为、心理和社会结果可能性上的相似性表明,有必要识别和治疗所有受CSA影响的成年人。