Trauma Chronicity and the Long-Term Needs of Childhood Sexual Trauma Survivors
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. CST: Impact on a Range of Life Domains
1.2. Trauma Duration and AAOs
1.3. CST Duration and Help-Seeking
1.4. The National Sexual Health Survey (NSHS)
1.5. Study Purpose
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Sampling, Data Collection, and Procedures
2.2. Measures
2.2.1. Independent Variable: CST Duration
2.2.2. Dependent Variables and Demographic Covariates
2.3. Data Analysis
3. Results
3.1. CST Exposure and Duration Category Prevalence
3.2. CST Duration: Cumulative AAOs in Adulthood
3.3. Does AAO Prevalence Increase with Longer CST Duration?
3.4. Cumulative Help-Seeking Related to CST
3.5. CST Prevalence Trends
4. Discussion
4.1. Overview
4.2. Chronic CST: Long-Term Health & Sexual Health Outcomes
4.3. CST & Help-Seeking
4.4. Measurement Theory: Research and Screening
4.5. NSHS Generalizability
4.6. Population Impact
4.7. Strengths and Limitations
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Adult Adverse Outcomes (AAOs) |
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Mental Health Outcomes |
Mental Health Problems [63] “In the past 4 weeks have you had any emotional problems?” [1 = Yes (n = 617, 9.5%), 0 = No (n = 5912, 90.5%)] |
Adult Sexual Trauma Screener: “Have you ever been forced or frightened by someone into doing something sexually that you did not want to do?”; Participants responding “yes” and who were exposed to at least one experience of sexual trauma at age 18 or older. [1 = Yes (n = 606, 8.7%), 0 = No (n = 6389, 91.3%)] |
Low Sexual Satisfaction a “In the last 12 months, has there been something either physical or emotional that has made it difficult for you to have a satisfying sexual relationship?” [Gender-specific variables; Women: 1 = Yes (n = 598, 18.1%), 0 = No (n = 2704, 81.9%); Men: 1 = Yes (n = 422, 13.4%), 0 = No (n = 2730, 86.6%)] |
Sexual Dysfunction (Females) a [64] Composite index of orgasmic and arousal difficulties; “Over the last 12 months how often have you had difficulty having an orgasm?” (1 = Never to 4 = All the time); “When you have sex is it easy or difficult for you to get sexually aroused?” (1 = Very easy to 4 = Very difficult) [1 = Moderate/severe dysfunction (scores of 3–4 on orgasm difficulty and/or arousal; n = 249, 7.6%); 0 = Low/no dysfunction (n = 3035, 92.4%)] |
Sexual Dysfunction (Males) a [64] Composite index of erectile, orgasmic, and arousal difficulties; “Over the last 12 months how often have you had difficulty having an orgasm?” (1 = Never to 4 = All the time); “Over the last 12 months, how often have you had difficulty keeping an erection?” (1 = Never to 4 = All the time); “When you have sex is it easy or difficult for you to get sexually aroused?” (1 = Very easy to 4 = Very difficult) [1 = Moderate/severe dysfunction (scores of 3–4 on orgasm, erectile, and/or arousal difficulty; n = 127, 4.0%); 0 = Low/no dysfunction (n = 3014, 96.0%)] |
Physical Health Outcomes |
Global Health b [63] “How would you rate your overall health?” [1 = Fair/poor (n = 604, 9.2%); 0 = Good/very good/excellent (n = 5932, 90.8%)] |
Recent Health Problems [63] “In the past 4 weeks have you had any physical health problems?” [1 = Yes (n = 964, 14.8%), 0 = No (n = 5571, 85.2%)] |
Lifetime STI diagnosis “Have you ever had a doctor or nurse tell you that you have a venereal disease?” [1 = Yes (n = 610, 9.3%), 0 = No (n = 5919, 90.7%)] |
Close Relationship Outcomes |
Divorce/Separation c “Currently are you...?” (1 = Legally married to 5 = Never married) [1 = Divorced/separated (n = 1001, 20.4%), 0 = Married/widowed (n = 3899, 79.6%)] |
Extramarital sex (EMS) c “At any time during your (1st-5th marriage) did you have sex with someone other than your husband/wife?” [1 = Any EMS (n = 963, 19.8%), 0 = No EMS (n = 3907, 80.2%)] |
Relationship Closeness d [65] 8 item scale assessing relationship closeness (e.g., “We have a regular time for getting together”; “We each know what we expect of each other”; 1 = Agree a lot to 4 = Disagree a lot); mean item scores were computed for each participant, with higher scores = greater closeness (Cronbach’s α = 0.69). Individuals with scores 1 or more standard deviations below the mean were operationalized as low scores (M = 27.0, SD = 3.8) and participants were dichotomized into low and high closeness groups. [1 = Low closeness (n = 699, 15.3%), 0 = High closeness (n = 3874, 84.7%)] |
Achievement Outcomes |
Lower Education “What was the highest grade/year of school you completed?” [1 = < College degree (n = 1973, 30.2%), 0 = College degree or higher (n = 4562, 69.8%)] |
Poverty Status [66] “In general, people with larger incomes can more easily get medical care. Tell me when I get to the category that best describes your household income before taxes for all of 1994. Please include the income of everyone in your household who contributed to your household income.” (1 = ≤ $10,000 to 6 = > $80,000) [Income below poverty level estimated based on census poverty threshold for 1994 (~$16,000); 1 = ≤ $20,000 (n = 1606, 25.8%), 0 = > $20,000 (n = 4630, 74.2%)] |
Incarceration “Have you ever been in jail for more than 24 h anytime in the last 15 years?” [1 = Yes (n = 341, 5.2%), 0 = No (n = 6188, 94.8%)] |
Cumulative AAOs e Mean score variable reflecting cumulative AAOs across physical and mental health and achievement domains (Range = 0–9 AAOs; M: 1.7, SD: 1.4). |
Lifetime Help-Seeking: CST-Related |
Sought Help Participants reporting forced/frightened sex were asked: “These are very personal experiences that some people keep to themselves. Other people seek some kind of help. By help we mean advice, information, or counseling. Did you seek help?” [Among participants with CST: 1 = Yes (n = 222, 37.9%), 0 = No (n = 364, 62.1%)] |
Help Sources “Who did you seek help from?” (participants instructed to select all that apply: police, teacher, clergy/spiritual leader, counselor/therapist/psychiatrist, medical doctor/nurse, magazines/newspaper/TV/radio, call-in radio, parent, spouse, other relative, friend) [2 variables were created to reflect types of help sought: any formal help and any informal help. Any formal help included police, teacher, clergy/spiritual leader, mental health providers, and medical providers (1 = Sought any formal help, n = 179, 30.5%; 0 = Did not seek formal help, n = 407, 69.5%). Informal help included parent, spouse, other relative, and friend (1 = Sought any informal help, n = 107, 18.8%; 0 = Did not seek informal help, n = 478, 81.4%). Participants who reported no help-seeking were included in the “did not seek help” group for both variables.] |
Sociodemographic Control Variables |
Age: Continuous, years (M: 39.8, SD: 0.17) |
Gender: Dichotomous, 1 = Male, 0 = Female |
Race/ethnicity: Dichotomous item derived from two separate items assessing racial (“Which would you say best describes your racial background?”) and ethnic identity (“Are you of Spanish, Hispanic, or Latino origin?”). |
Sexual orientation: Derived from items assessing participant gender and the gender identity of sexual partners in since age 18. |
Demographic Characteristics (Reference Group) | Total Sample (N = 6537) | Single Event CST (N = 236) | Intermediate Duration (N = 238) | Extreme Duration (N = 94) |
---|---|---|---|---|
% (N) | % (N) | % (N) | % (N) | |
Gender | ||||
Female | 48 (3169) | 77 (189) | 81 (199) | 87 (87) |
Male (ref) | 52 (3368) | 23 (47) | 19 (39) | 13 (7) |
Age group | ||||
18–29 years | 27 (1674) | 37 (86) | 37 (81) | 42 (35) |
30–39 years | 26 (1824) | 34 (83) | 32 (80) | 39 (38) |
40–49 years | 21 (1486) | 17 (42) | 19 (52) | 14 (15) |
≥50 years (ref) | 26 (1553) | 11 (25) | 12 (25) | 6 (6) |
Race/ethnicity | ||||
White (ref) | 73 (4996) | 80 (191) | 75 (184) | 75 (71) |
Black | 12 (605) | 10 (21) | 15 (26) | 6 (6) |
Hispanic/Latino | 10 (605) | 7 (16) | 7 (16) | 10 (11) |
Other | 6 (329) | 3 (8) | 3 (8) | 9 (6) |
Sexual orientation | ||||
Heterosexual (ref) | 98 (6156) | 94 (218) | 89 (207) | 86 (80) |
Gay/lesbian/bisexual | 2 (218) | 6 (15) | 11 (29) | 14 (13) |
Education | ||||
≤HS diploma/GED | 43 (2815) | 49 (91) | 59 (114) | 65 (53) |
Some college | 27 (1747) | 31 (82) | 28 (79) | 22 (23) |
≥College degree (ref) | 30 (1973) | 20 (63) | 13 (45) | 13 (18) |
Demographic Characteristics (Reference Group) | CST Prevalence | ||
---|---|---|---|
Total Sample (N = 6537) | Women (n = 3368) | Men (n = 3169) | |
% [95% CI] | % [95% CI] | % [95% CI] | |
Gender | |||
Female | 13.7 [12.4, 15.0] *** | -- | -- |
Male (ref) | 3.0 [2.4, 3.8] | -- | -- |
Age group | |||
18–29 years | 11.0 [9.5, 12.8] *** | 20.8 [18.0, 24.1] *** | 2.3 [1.4, 3.7] |
30–39 years | 10.7 [9.3, 12.4] *** | 17.0 [14.6, 19.8] *** | 5.1 [3.6, 7.1] ** |
40–49 years | 6.9 [5.7, 8.4] *** | 11.3 [9.1, 14.0] *** | 2.8 [1.8, 4.4] |
≥50 years (ref) | 3.5 [2.6, 4.6] | 5.0 [3.6, 6.9] | 1.9 [1.0, 3.6] |
Race/ethnicity | |||
White (ref) | 8.6 [7.8, 9.5] | 14.7 [13.2, 16.3] | 3.2 [2.5, 4.1] |
Black | 7.7 [5.7, 10.4] | 11.6 [8.4, 15.9] | 2.1 [0.9, 5.0] |
Hispanic/Latino | 6.1 [4.4, 8.2] * | 9.8 [6.9, 13.7] ** | 2.9 [1.5, 5.5] |
Other | 6.5 [4.2, 9.9] | 11.4 [7.1, 17.8] | 3.1 [1.2, 7.8] |
Sexual orientation | |||
Heterosexual (ref) | 7.6 [7.0, 8.4] | 13.1 [11.9, 14.5] | 2.6 [2.0, 3.3] |
Gay/lesbian/bisexual | 31.1 [24.4, 38.7] *** | 45.9 [35.5, 56.6] *** | 18.9 [11.3, 29.8] ** |
Education | |||
≤HS diploma/GED | 8.5 [7.4, 9.6] *** | 1 4.0 [12.2, 16.0] * | 3.3 [2.4, 4.5] ** |
Some college | 9.8 [8.3, 11.4] *** | 15.0 [12.8, 17.6] * | 4.4 [3.0, 6.3] ** |
≥College degree (ref) | 5.7 [4.7, 6.9] | 11.2 [9.2, 13.5] | 1.3 [0.7, 2.2] |
Chronic CST Duration | ||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Adult Adverse Outcomes | No CST (N = 5950) | CST Duration: Continuous | Single Event CST (N = 236) | Intermediate Duration (N = 238) | Extreme Duration (N = 94) | |||
% | aOR [95% CI] | % | aOR [95% CI] | % | aOR [95% CI] | % | aOR [95% CI] | |
Mental Health | ||||||||
Mental Health Problems (Yes) | 8 | 1.2 [1.1, 1.3] *** | 17 | 1.9 [1.3, 2.7] *** | 23 | 2.7 [2.0, 3.7] *** | 33 | 4.2 [2.7, 6.6] *** |
Adult Sexual Trauma (Yes) | 7 | 1.5 [1.4, 1.6] *** | 22 | 2.3 [1.7, 3.3] *** | 24 | 2.4 [1.7, 3.3] *** | 26 | 2.1 [1.3, 3.5] ** |
Low Sexual Satisfaction (F) | 16 | 1.2 [1.2, 1.3] *** | 27 | 2.0 [1.4, 2.8] *** | 30 | 2.3 [1.6, 3.1] *** | 47 | 4.6 [3.0, 7.2] *** |
Low Sexual Satisfaction (M) | 13 | 1.2 [1.0, 1.4] * | 23 | 2.4 [1.2, 4.7] * | 26 | 2.8 [1.3, 5.7] ** | 33 | 4.3 [0.9, 20.7] ^ |
SxDys (F) (Moderate/Severe) | 6 | 1.2 [1.1, 1.3] *** | 13 | 2.3 [1.4, 3.5] *** | 16 | 2.8 [1.9, 4.3] *** | 21 | 4.0 [2.3, 6.9] *** |
SxDys (M) (Moderate/Severe) | 4 | 1.3 [1.1, 1.5] ** | 4 | 1.5 [0.4, 6.0] | 13 | 4.7 [1.7, 13.0] ** | 17 | 8.4 [1.0, 69.8] * |
Physical Health | ||||||||
General Health (Fair/poor) | 9 | 1.2 [1.1, 1.2] *** | 10 | 1.8 [1.2, 2.8] ** | 10 | 1.6 [1.0, 2.5] * | 18 | 3.6 [2.1, 6.2] *** |
Health Problems (Yes) | 14 | 1.1 [1.1, 1.2] *** | 17 | 1.4 [1.0, 2.0] ^ | 22 | 1.8 [1.3, 2.5] *** | 31 | 2.8 [1.8, 4.4] *** |
STI (Ever) | 8 | 1.2 [1.1, 1.3] *** | 20 | 3.2 [2.3, 4.5] *** | 22 | 3.5 [2.5, 4.9] *** | 21 | 3.3 [2.0, 5.6] *** |
Close Relationships | ||||||||
Divorced/Separated (Current) | 19 | 1.1 [1.1, 1.2] *** | 30 | 1.8 [1.3, 2.7] *** | 29 | 1.7 [1.2, 2.4] ** | 40 | 2.7 [1.7, 4.4] *** |
EMS (Ever) | 19 | 1.2 [1.1, 1.3] *** | 29 | 2.6 [1.8, 3.8] *** | 33 | 3.2 [2.2, 4.6] *** | 33 | 3.3 [1.9, 5.6] *** |
Closeness (Low) | 14 | 1.1 [1.0, 1.2] ** | 22 | 1.5 [1.1, 2.2] * | 23 | 1.6 [1.1, 2.4] ** | 28 | 2.1 [1.2, 3.5] ** |
Achievement | ||||||||
Ed. < College degree | 69 | 1.1 [1.1, 1.2] *** | 73 | 1.2 [0.9, 1.7] | 81 | 2.0 [1.4, 2.8] *** | 81 | 1.9 [1.1, 3.2] * |
Poverty status (Current) | 25 | 1.1 [1.1, 1.2] *** | 26 | 1.0 [0.7, 1.3] | 34 | 1.4 [1.0, 1.8] * | 46 | 2.2 [1.5, 3.4] *** |
Incarceration (Past 15 years.) | 5 | 1.2 [1.1, 1.3] *** | 7 | 2.8 [1.6, 4.9] *** | 6 | 2.6 [1.4, 4.7] *** | 9 | 5.2 [2.3, 11.7] *** |
Any CST (N = 587) | CST Duration | Omnibus Chi-Square 1 | Post-Hoc Comparisons 2 | |||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Single Event (N = 236) | Intermediate (N = 238) | Extreme (N = 94) | ||||
Help Sources | % (N) | % (N) | % (N) | % (N) | p-Value | |
Overall Help-Seeking | 37.9 (222) | 26.7 (63) | 42.0 (100) | 59.1 (55) | ≤0.001 | Ext > Int > SE |
Help Sources | ||||||
Self 3 | 2.4 (14) | 1.3 (3) | 1.7 (4) | 7.5 (7) | 0.008 | Ext > Int/SE |
Informal help 4 | 18.6 (109) | 12.3 (29) | 22.7 (54) | 25.5 (24) | 0.003 | Ext/Int > SE |
Friend | 9.7 (57) | 6.8 (16) | 10.1 (24) | 17.2 (16) | 0.021 | Ext > SE |
Parents | 7.0 (41) | 6.4 (15) | 8.8 (21) | 5.4 (5) | 0.492 | --- |
Other relative | 4.3 (25) | 2.1 (5) | 5.9 (14) | 5.4 (5) | 0.096 | --- |
Spouse | 3.2 (19) | 0.9 (2) | 5.0 (12) | 5.4 (5) | 0.009 | Ext/Int > SE |
Formal help 5 | 30.6 (179) | 19.5 (46) | 33.6 (80) | 53.8 (50) | ≤0.001 | Ext > Int > SE |
Counselor/therapist | 26.1 (153) | 15.3 (36) | 29.8 (71) | 46.2 (43) | ≤0.001 | Ext > Int > SE |
Clergy/spiritual leader | 4.8 (28) | 2.5 (6) | 3.8 (9) | 14.0 (13) | ≤0.001 | Ext > Int/SE |
Doctor/nurse | 3.2 (19) | 2.1 (5) | 4.6 (11) | 3.2 (3) | 0.311 | --- |
Police | 2.9 (17) | 2.5 (6) | 2.5 (6) | 5.4 (5) | 0.341 | --- |
Teacher | 0.3 (2) | 0.9 (2) | 0 (0) | 0 (0) | 0.474 | --- |
NSHS (1995–96) | UMHS III (2002–2003) | NAS (2005) | NESARC-III (2012–2013) | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
n/N | Prevalence % [95% C.I.] | n/N | Prevalence % [95% C.I.] | n/N | Prevalence % [95% C.I.] | n/N | Prevalence % [95% C.I.] | |
Women ≥ 18 years | 491/3368 | 13.7 [12.4, 15.0] | -- | -- | 433/3601 | 12.3 [11.2, 13.4] | 3296/18,111 | 18.2 [17.6, 18.8] |
Men ≥ 18 years | 96/3169 | 3.0 [2.4, 3.8] | -- | -- | -- | -- | 992/16,000 | 6.2 [5.8, 6.6] |
Women 18–55 years | 471/2811 | 16.0 [14.6, 17.6] | -- | -- | 343/2489 | 13.8 [12.4, 15.2] | -- | -- |
MSM ≥ 18 years | 17/112 | 18.9 [11.3, 29.8] | 193/879 | 22.0 [20.6, 23.4] | -- | -- | -- | -- |
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Schuyler, A.C.; Catania, J.A. Trauma Chronicity and the Long-Term Needs of Childhood Sexual Trauma Survivors. Sexes 2022, 3, 367-384. https://doi.org/10.3390/sexes3030028
Schuyler AC, Catania JA. Trauma Chronicity and the Long-Term Needs of Childhood Sexual Trauma Survivors. Sexes. 2022; 3(3):367-384. https://doi.org/10.3390/sexes3030028
Chicago/Turabian StyleSchuyler, Ashley C., and Joseph A. Catania. 2022. "Trauma Chronicity and the Long-Term Needs of Childhood Sexual Trauma Survivors" Sexes 3, no. 3: 367-384. https://doi.org/10.3390/sexes3030028