| Literature DB >> 28054214 |
Melanie Hugill1, Katherine Berry2, Ian Fletcher1.
Abstract
An individual's own experiences of childhood and being parented are likely to be key determinants of their later parenting experiences. Childhood sexual abuse (CSA) is arguably the most toxic experience to occur in childhood and therefore may be particularly likely to impact on parenting stress in the context of parenting one's own children. This paper aims to review studies investigating associations between earlier CSA and later parenting to determine the size and consistency of the effects, identify any mediators and moderators of the relationship, and assess the quality of the evidence base. PsycINFO, Academic Search Complete, CINAHL, MEDLINE, Web of Science, PubMed and PILOTS were searched from date of inception until 4th March 2016 and 14 studies met the inclusion criteria. Seven studies indicated a degree of direct association between experiencing CSA and later parenting stress, two studies found no association and five studies suggest that other variables such as locus of control and current stressors may affect the relationship between CSA and parenting stress. Additionally, 10 studies suggest an indirect relationship between CSA and parenting stress through current level of depression. Results suggest the existence of a relationship between CSA and parenting stress though this association is mostly mediated by other variables, including depression and other stressors. Clearer definitions of CSA and use of validated questionnaires are essential to progress this field of research.Entities:
Keywords: Childhood sexual abuse (CSA); Parenting stress; Systematic review
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28054214 PMCID: PMC5344942 DOI: 10.1007/s00737-016-0708-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Arch Womens Ment Health ISSN: 1434-1816 Impact factor: 3.633
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram depicting study selection
Demographic information from studies
| Study | Study design | Country | Ethnicity | Participants | Type of sample | Mean age of mother |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alexander et al. ( | Cross-sectional | USA | 80% Caucasian, 11.1% African-American, 8.9% Latina | 90 mothers (19 (21%) reported CSA) | Community - response to advert | 36.4 |
| Barrett ( | Secondary data analysis from a panel (longitudinal) study | USA | Predominately African-American (82.7%) | 483 mothers (54 (11%) reported CSA) | Community – benefit recipients | 28.83 |
| Buist and Janson ( | 3 year prospective study | Australia | Not reported | 45 mothers who had developed depression postpartum (23 (51%) reported CSA) | Clinical - mother & baby unit. Mothers diagnosed with either major depression or adjustment disorder | CSA group: 30.5 |
| Douglas ( | Case–control | Scotland | Not reported | 63 mothers (34 (54%) reported CSA) | Clinical – mental health out-patient clinic | CSA group: 31.7 |
| Ethier et al. ( | Case–control | Canada (French speaking) | Not reported | 80 mothers (40 “negligent” & 40 control). Frequency of sexual abuse “events” reported: 20 events reported in the negligent group, 14 in the control | Neglecting mothers from Youth Protection Services, matched with controls from the community | 28.6 (neglecting) 30.3 (control) |
| Harmer et al. ( | Cross-sectional | Australia | Predominately Anglo-Saxon, three mothers identified themselves as half native aboriginal | 46 mothers recovering from drug or alcohol addiction (22 out of 39 (56%) who completed the CSA measure reported CSA) | Clinical (recovering addicts) residing at a therapeutic community | 28.5 |
| Lang et al. ( | Prospective: Time point 1 in early pregnancy, time point two when child was 12 months old | USA | 61.4% Caucasian, 18.2% Hispanic, 11.4% African-American, 9.1% “other” | 44 mothers at time point one, 31 at time point two (70.4%). 20.4% reported moderate/severe CSA at time point one | Community - response to advert | 29.27 |
| Lutenbacher ( | Cross-sectional | USA | 56% African-American, no other information given | 59 low income mothers (9 reported CSA only, 11 (19%) reported a mixture of CSA and physical abuse) | Community - response to advert and approached by staff | 26.1 |
| Mapp ( | Secondary data analysis from a cross-sectional prospective study between 1991 and 1998 (used data only from time point 2) | USA | 73% African-American, no other information given | 265 (40.4% reported CSA) | Community – from a prenatal clinic | Not reported |
| Pazdera et al. ( | Secondary data analysis from a cross-sectional prospective study between 1991 and 1998 | USA | 73% African-American, no other information given | 265 mothers (number of CSA survivors not reported, but assumed to be 40.4% as above) | Community – from a prenatal clinic | Not reported |
| Pereira et al. ( | Cross-sectional | Canada | 67.2% Caucasian, 13.2% Asian, 5.6% Hispanic, 3.8% mixed ethnicity, 2.8% African, 0.6% North American, 3.1% “other” | 291 mothers (50 (17%) reported CSA) | Community - response to advert and approached by staff | 33.38 |
| Renner et al. ( | Secondary data analysis from a cross-sectional prospective study between 1991 and 1998 | USA | 73% African-American | 264 mothers (107 (40.5%) CSA survivors), 1 excluded for excessive missing data | Community – from a prenatal clinic | 26.98 |
| Schuetze and Eiden ( | Secondary data analysis from a cross-sectional prospective study between 1991 and 1998 | USA | 73% African-American, 27% Caucasian | 263 mothers (107 (40.6%) reported CSA) | Community – from a prenatal clinic | 26.99 |
| Wright et al. ( | Cross-sectional | USA | 96% Caucasian | 79 mothers (all self-reported CSA) | Community - response to advert | 38.2 |
aSame primary data set used
The measures used in each study, the type of data analysis, main results from each study and global quality rating score
| Study | Measure of CSA | Measure of parental stress | Analysis | Result | Global quality score |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alexander et al. ( | Questions: | PSI-SF | Analysis of covariance – main & interactive effects of CSA & relationship satisfaction on parenting stress. | No main effect of CSA on parenting stress (no figures provided). | Weak |
| Barrett ( | 2 questions: | A scale taken from a women’s employment study which included items from the PSI | T-tests: | CSA mean stress score x Control mean stress score | Moderate |
| Buist and Janson ( | Abbreviated version of the Otago Women’s Health Survey (Martin, Anderson, Roman, & O’Shea, 1993). Asks details of the abuse, age of onset, age and gender of perpetrator, relationship to perpetrator and whether the victim confided in anyone at the time, regarding the abuse. | PSI | Two sample t-tests | Means for index and comparison groups not significantly different on either parent or child domain of PSI | Moderate |
| Douglas ( | Survey of Sexual Abuse (Tsai, Feldman-Summers & Edgar, 1979). Definition of sexual abuse limited to physical contact abuse occurring before the age of 16. | PSI-SF | T-tests and correlations | CSA mean stress score x Control mean stress score | Moderate |
| Ethier et al. ( | Psychosocial interview (including questions about CSA) | PSI | Correlation |
| Weak |
| Harmer et al. ( | The Child Abuse & Trauma Scale (CATS) – sexual abuse scale | PSI | Correlation |
| Weak |
| Lang et al. ( | CTQ | PSI-SF | Correlations and multiple regression | PSI Defensive Responding: | Weak |
| Lutenbacher ( | Researcher questions: | Everyday Stressors Index (ESI) | Correlation |
| Weak |
| Mapp ( | An adapted version of the questionnaire in Russell (1983): At least one contact or non-contact episode prior to the age of 18 where the perpetrator was at least 5 years older than the women or where force was used. | PSI | Path analysis |
| Moderate |
| Pazdera et al. ( | An adapted version of the questionnaire in Russell (1983): At least one contact or non-contact episode prior to the age of 18 where the perpetrator was at least 5 years older than the women or where force was used. | PSI | Path analysis (mediation) |
| Moderate |
| Pereira et al. ( | CTQ | PSI-SF | Correlation & ordinary least squares regression with bootstrapping |
| Moderate |
| Renner et al. ( | An adapted version of the questionnaire in Russell (1983): At least one contact or non-contact episode prior to the age of 18 where the perpetrator was at least 5 years older than the women or where force was used. | PSI Parent domain (5 of 7 subscales) | Latent Profile Analysis | CSA group reported higher mean scores on 5 PSI parent domain subscales. Cohen’s | Moderate |
| Schuetze and Eiden ( | An adapted version of the questionnaire in Russell (1983): At least one contact or non-contact episode prior to the age of 18 where the perpetrator was at least 5 years older than the women or where force was used. | PSI | Structural Equation Modelling (SEM) | PSI Child Domain, | Moderate |
| Wright et al. ( | Self-identification via a questionnaire, coded for severity by the researchers | PSI | Hierarchical regression analysis & mediator/moderator analysis | PSI Parent Domain mean scores markedly elevated on six of the seven subscales for CSA sample. | Weak |
aSame primary data set used
CSA Childhood sexual abuse, PSI-SF Parental Stress Inventory – Short Form, PSI Parental Stress Inventory, CTQ Childhood Trauma Questionnaire