OBJECTIVE: to analyze the narratives of sexually abused women in childhood, identifying issues related to gender and generation. METHOD: descriptive research with a qualitative approach, based on 214 reports selected from the Brazilian campaign #primeiroassedio (first harassment), which took place on Twitter social network, collected from a structured instrument. Thematic content analysis was used. RESULTS: girls were the main victims of sexual abuse. The perpetrators were mostly male and people they knew. Five categories emerged from the narratives: Sexual abuse in the aggressors' discourse; The child as the object of sexual pleasure; Violated childhood; Victims' guilty feelings; and Repercussions of sexual abuse experienced in childhood. CONCLUSION: sexual abuse often occurs in the family context and, even if sometimes veiled, the submission of girls' power in gender relations and of children in generation relationships is evident. Analyzing sexual abuse under the categories of gender and generation contributes to an in-depth understanding of the phenomenon, directing practices more effectively to their coping.
OBJECTIVE: to analyze the narratives of sexually abused women in childhood, identifying issues related to gender and generation. METHOD: descriptive research with a qualitative approach, based on 214 reports selected from the Brazilian campaign #primeiroassedio (first harassment), which took place on Twitter social network, collected from a structured instrument. Thematic content analysis was used. RESULTS:girls were the main victims of sexual abuse. The perpetrators were mostly male and people they knew. Five categories emerged from the narratives: Sexual abuse in the aggressors' discourse; The child as the object of sexual pleasure; Violated childhood; Victims' guilty feelings; and Repercussions of sexual abuse experienced in childhood. CONCLUSION:sexual abuse often occurs in the family context and, even if sometimes veiled, the submission of girls' power in gender relations and of children in generation relationships is evident. Analyzing sexual abuse under the categories of gender and generation contributes to an in-depth understanding of the phenomenon, directing practices more effectively to their coping.
Childsexual abuse is a complex social phenomenon of great repercussion. An American
study of fatal and nonfatal sexual abuse cases found that in 2015 they represented
an economic cost of $9.3 billion to the US. This cost was associated with health,
productivity, child welfare, violence, crime, education and quality of life
.According to a report by the United Nations Children’s Fund, in 2012, an average of
17 million reports of sexually abused women in childhood were recorded in 38 low-
and middle-income countries. In 28 European countries, there were approximately 2.5
million reports of adolescents sexually abused before 15 years of age
.Most sexually abused children often do not report the situation due to fear, guilt,
shame, lack of trust and lack of knowledge about support services
. However, the communication of childsexual abuse is crucial to its
confrontation, since it allows for the interruption of violence, assistance to the
child and their families, and the implementation of protective measures
.In the year 2015, in Brazil, a social network created the campaign
#primeiroassedio (first harassment), based on the case of a
12-year-old girl who, after participating in a television program, suffered various
forms of aggression, mainly via the internet. In this campaign, women were able to
report and share situations of sexual abuse experienced during childhood.The present study used this database. Although, the campaign has the word
“harassment” in the title, in this research we adopted the term “sexual abuse”. This
is the way in which Brazilian legislation criminalizes the actions practiced against
children and adolescents, from the carnal conjunction or libidinous act, in person
or by electronic means
. This term is also incorporated into the Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) as
the recommended terminology to approach the subject.It is noteworthy that reports on childsexual abuse do not reveal its magnitude,
since there is a significant number of sexually abused children who externalize or
denounce this traumatic experience only in adult life
. This aspect greatly hampers further interpretations associated with the
phenomenon, such as those using gender and generation cuts. In the scientific
production on the subject, analyzes of child violence in these perspectives are
still under construction and seek to deepen the discussions for the recognition,
identification and coping of the problem
-
.Aiming to contribute to the development of analyzes on child violence, as well as to
provide a broader understanding of childsexual abuse, in addition to the merely
descriptive approach, i.e., looking at interventions in social reality, the
objective of this study was to analyze the narratives of women who had been sexually
abused in childhood identifying issues related to gender and generation.
Method
This is a descriptive research of a qualitative approach, based on reports from the
users of a social network, Twitter, which establishes momentary connections. Its
users use the “#” (hashtag) to highlight a subject in a tweet, which consists of a
message with a maximum of 140 characters. Tweets that have the same label can be
grouped and searchable on a specific topic
. The grouping allows the creation of campaigns through a message, usually
linked to events and widely disseminated by social media.In this research, reports were selected from the Brazilian campaign
#primeiroassedio (first harassment), in which young women and
adults published tweets about sexual abuse experienced in childhood. Data collection
was performed from October 22 to November 22, 2015, one month after the creation of
the hashtag.For the collection and systematization of the data, a structured instrument was used,
containing the number of the tweet, the victim sex and age, the location of the
aggression, the relationship between the aggressor and the victim, the date and time
of publication, and full report.A total of 530 tweets, identified by codes from T1 (tweet 1) to T530 (tweet 530),
were collected. For the research, 214 tweets were selected, considering the
inclusion criteria: reports of women; age between four and nine years at the time of
sexual abuse; presenting the location of the aggression; the aggressor’s sex; and
relationship of the aggressor with the victim. We excluded publications that did not
refer to personal reports of sexual violence and repeated messages.The minimum age at the time of sexual abuse was established as four years due to the
possibility of users remembering and describing the situation more accurately.
Studies carried out with children allegedly sexually abused to verify the
potentiality of the forensic interview to investigate the crimes also presented four
years as the minimum age of participants
-
.The reports of the selected tweets were submitted to thematic content analysis
. The stages of pre-analysis, exploration of the material, treatment of
results, interpretation and inference were performed. The categories of analysis
were Gender and Generation, anchored in the framework of historical and dialectical
materialism, established by the researchers due to the potential for capturing and
interpreting the researched social phenomena.In this context, the gender category is based on the difference between men and
women, which composes the social relations and the construction of meanings on the
relations of power in society
. The generation category, in turn, is predicated on beyond the age of social
subjects, insofar as it defines the social statutes of a particular group through
political and ideological similarities, located in time and space
.This research did not require approval from the Research Ethics Committee because it
used data from a social network, of free access on the Internet. The Consolidated
Criteria for Reporting Qualitative Research (COREQ) guide was applied in order to
verify the scientific quality of the research. This guide was adapted according to
the specificity of the research database. In this way, the criteria of the second
domain were partially met and those of the third domain were completely met.
Results
In the data collected, a total of 214 Brazilian women reported having been sexually
abused in childhood. It should be noted that, due to the use of tweets, it was not
possible to characterize these participants. Violations had occurred when they were
between four and nine years of age. Approximately one quarter (27.57%) of the
participants stated that the situation of violence had occurred at the age of eight;
21.02%, at nine years of age; 16.82%, at seven years of age; 15.88%, at six years of
age; 10.74%, at five years of age; and 7.94% at four years of age. The number of
cases increased as age increased.Concerning the location of the aggressions, 48.13% of the participants reported it
was at home and 13.55% in the street. The other participants mentioned the school,
the church, the park, the beach, the farm, the pool, the shop, the bakery, the mall
and the bus. We found that childsexual abuse is more frequent in the home
environment.Regarding the authors of the aggressions, 97.66% were male. The age of the aggressors
was not reported in 84.11% of the tweets. When reported, the victims informed that
the perpetrators of sexual abuse were older than the victims. As for the type of
relationship with the aggressors, 22.42% were unknown persons. The other
participants were victims of known persons, such as family members and friends of
the family.The analysis of the reports allowed the emergence of five empirical categories:
“Sexual abuse in the aggressors’ discourse”; “The child as an object of sexual
pleasure”; “Violated childhood”; “Victims’ guilty feelings”; and “Repercussions of
sexual abuse experienced in childhood”.In the category Sexual abuse in the aggressors’ discourse, the
participants revealed that the abuse was not restricted to physical contact. The
aggressors used terms that expressed desire for the developing female body:
When I was seven, a friend of my father’s, every time he saw me, he used
to say I was beautiful, and that when I turned 15 I would marry him
(T204). I remembered that when I was eight, a 16-year-old boy said that I
was ‘just ready’ (T51). At the age of eight I used to be called
hottie by the masons (T134).The reports revealed that the aggressors expressed desire for the female body during
the childhood of the victims and their adolescence was the moment for the
consummation of that desire. Such a fact leads us to believe that the aggressors see
the child being prepared to become an adult and to “be ready” to be “attacked.” It
is as if in the phase of adolescence or of adult life the woman was allowed by
society to be violated, which, in childhood, would be socially condemned.The speeches also revealed the child’s reification (“being ready”) and a wild
disposition (“attack”), in which the adult man is the predator and the strong
element, while the child is the prey, the weak and helpless element of the
relationship.In the category The child as an object of sexual pleasure, the
survey participants reported that, in the context of sexual abuse, their bodies
appeared to be territories of free access to the perpetrators insofar as they were
touched without consent: When I was seven, a priest of my family was here at
home. He and I were alone in the bedroom and he ran his hand over my ass.
Disgusting! (T167). My stepfather. He ran his hand over my body
while my mother slept [...] (T294). A grandfather of a little
friend took advantage of the fact that he was taking care of us to put his hand
in the middle of my legs (T409). A great-uncle always kept
putting me on his lap and was running his hand over me over my shorts
(T83). In the living room of my grandmother’s house, I was alone with my
uncle and he put his hand inside my panties (T122). A friend’s
father would put me in his lap and put my hand inside my panties, touching
me (T228).The comments emphasized the domestic environment as a frequent place for the
occurrence of sexual abuse. Violations generally occurred in situations understood
as caring and affection, at times when the aggressor and the child were alone.In the category Violated childhood, the speeches revealed that
aggressors took advantage of the naivety and innocence of children to engage in
sexual abuse: My dad made an album of me taking a shower. I was sexually
suggestive in the photos, ‘in his sick mind’. I was six years old (T68). It was
with a painter at my parents’ house. I was nine years old. He made me suck his
member. I had no idea what I was doing (T245). My aunt’s
husband used to caress my legs and moan as he did so. I was only four; it took
me about 10 [years] to understand what it meant (F306).The moments of play, a characteristic activity of childhood, consisted of appropriate
situations for adults to practice sexual violence in a veiled and somewhat
permissive way: At the beach house, a family friend put his hand under my
dress and asked if I wanted to play (T501). The neighbor used to do a “game”
throwing me and his daughter, at same age, up and letting us falling down
through his body (T386). I was playing, and then an uncle put
me on his lap and smoothed the breasts that I did not even have (T496).
An uncle called me to play doctor. He put himself on top of me and began
rubbing himself (T168).The aggressors took advantage of situations characteristic of childhood, such as
play, to practice sexual abuse. In this way, the participants could not immediately
recognize the violence, which prevented the attackers from being blamed and
reported.The category Victims’ guilty feelings included testimonies of
participants who, when in childhood, had difficulties to report sexual abuse to
relatives or persons they knew because they felt guilty. Even in situations where
they tried to report what happened to some adult, they did not receive attention. In
some cases, the violation was considered a reason for mockery: My first
harassment came from my stepfather when I was eight, unfortunately! I was
ashamed to tell my mother, but today he is paying for everything
(T231). Me, nine years, swimming training. He, the driver who used to
take me to the club. For years I thought it was my fault (T471).
I was nine years old and a neighbor squeezed my breasts. I told an adult
and everyone laughed. I was still blamed for what happened (T415).The fact that the perpetrators of sexual abuse are known adults or who have an
affective bond with the participants may have further confused the perception in
childhood about the abusive act.In category Repercussions of sexual abuse experienced in childhood,
the reports described long-term consequences for the participants’ lives. They
referred mainly to psychological and social traumas, which influenced the
interaction with other people and the perception about themselves: Nine
years old, a man tried to grab me in front of my cousin’s old house. To this day
I do not walk the street where it occurred (T263). I was eight
years old, a relative kissed me against my will and ran my hand all over my
body. No one knows the psychological consequences of this (T182).
Seven years old. A man grabbed hold of me inside the church. After
kissing me, he apologized. I felt disgusted with myself, developed OCD
(Obsessive Compulsive Disorder) (T388). At six, on vacation, I
woke up with a friend of my brother’s hand on my ass. I was never a child
anymore (T280).The reports show that sexual abuse in childhood consisted of a traumatic experience
that had many repercussions in the life of the participants.
Discussion
The analysis of the reports of Brazilian women who experienced sexual abuse in
childhood confirms that the phenomenon is determined by unequal relations of
generation associated with the constructions of gender roles, which influence
patterns for the female and male since childhood
.The differences between the generations and the genders, which underlie the
manifestations of violence in childhood, are results of the established asymmetry of
power between the female and the male (intergender relationship) and between the
child and the adult (intergenerational relationship)
-
,
.The fact that the participants had suffered sexual abuse between the ages of four and
nine, especially in the domestic context and by men they knew, is similar to that
found in other research with sexually abused children and adolescents. It was
identified that the first violations were recorded in the pre-school and school
phases and that the perpetrators were predominantly male and known by the
victims
.This aspect demonstrates the submission and dependence of the victims in relation to
the perpetrators, most of whom are responsible for the victim’s subsistence. Thus,
some adults responsible for the care of the child or who maintains an affective bond
with her have totally distorted the love or care relationship, committing acts that
implied childsexual abuse, with attitudes vastly opposed to that expected.The domestic environment presents itself as a favorable place for perpetrating childsexual abuse, since, in general, it guarantees protection to the aggressors and the
silence of the victims. Data from the Violence and Accidents Surveillance System
(VIVA) Report from 2009 to 2011 reiterate the results of this study revealing that
the highest proportions (62.4%) of the cases of violence against children and
adolescents occurred at home
.Girls suffered sexual abuse mainly from male offenders. This highlights the
importance of considering the gender issues for understanding and interpreting this
phenomenon. This result also corroborates the data from the VIVA Report, from 2009
to 2011, in which girls stood out among the victims of sexual violence (79.8%), and
most perpetrators were male (95.5%)
.The fact that girls represent the majority of victims of childsexual abuse is
associated with the relationship of domination between the aggressors and the
victims, forming two forms of submission: related to gender (male over female) and
to generation (an adult over a child)
-
.These forms of domination become more expressive when perpetrators are known to the
victims, since children are often dependent on adults - usually family members - to
survive. Since the family is socially recognized as responsible for providing care
for the child, guaranteeing adequate conditions for child development, it is
contradictory that the person who should protect and care for the children harms
them. For children, acknowledging the abuse even when adults represents a double
violence - the aggression itself and the refusal of protection.On the other hand, the State, which should share with the families the responsibility
for child protection, appears to be negligent both in public policies and in
effective actions. Studies highlight the failures of services and the child
protection network, with lack of knowledge of professionals about what to do and
where to refer victims, shortage of workers and lack of support from other services.
There are also gaps in professional training, lack of clarification in the
definition of roles, work overload, lack of time to implement more effective care,
fear of involvement with the problem and fear of invading family privacy
.The reports published in the #primeiroassedio (first harassment)
campaign also revealed that the manifestation of sexual desire by men is not limited
to adult women, but extends to girls, arousing greed, situation that incurs in
abuse. Therefore, the female body has become the object of sexual desire since
childhood, with the foreshadowing that, at some point of its development, it can be
sexually dominated.When the victim of sexual violence is a child, there is also the difficulty to
understand the abusive relationship. A survey of 118 children between five and eight
years of age, using a risk scenario simulation, found that 20% of the participants
accepted verbally leaving a place with an unknown person, while half of the sample
reported the presence of this unknown only after having been questioned, and
one-third of the children did not disclose this information after being
questioned
.The location and author of the aggression make it prone to perpetrate child sexual
abuse, since the victim is involved in power relations associated with gender and
generation issues, occupying the weakest and most powerless pole, including on the
autonomy of their own body.Concealed and hidden abuse in the private spaces of homes or in relations of
friendship and kinship confuse children, who have no defense mechanisms and
arguments against adult domination. This is aggravated when sexual abuse is reported
to adults and disqualified.A survey of 11,364 Finnish children about the communication of sexual abuse in
childhood found that 80% of the participants had shared the situation, in which
friends (48%) and mothers (20%) were the most frequent listeners. However, only 7%
had reported it to the police, 5% to a teacher, 4% to a social worker, 3% to the
school counselor and 2% to the school nurse. The main justification for not
revealing it was to consider the experience as irrelevant (41%)
.In addition, the fear, guilt and concern associated with the reaction of adults
constitute barriers to reporting cases of sexual abuse experienced in childhood and
adolescence. This situation can be overcome by the dialogue established for the
sharing of experiences and the search for support to cope with violence
.The frailty manifested by children in recognizing sexual abuse and the difficulty in
distinguishing reality from fantasy were artifices used by perpetrators to commit
rape during false play. Thus, the experience of being abused in childhood reflected
in the play of the victims, which is one of the ways children interpret the world in
which they live.With regard to the recognition of violence, a study of 161 participants aged four to
17 years found that only from 14 years of age children were able to provide adequate
terms for the sexual parts of the human body. This may be related to the lack of
knowledge about the terms, the use of colloquial terms or the refusal to talk about
the subject
. Therefore, the identification of childsexual abuse is a complex task.The difficulty of children in understanding sexual abuse and the feelings of guilt
later unleashed are generally recognized in adult life. And, of course, recognizing
the situation can leave short-term and long-term marks on women’s lives
.A study of 67 adult participants who had been victims of sexual abuse in childhood
found three barriers to the denunciation. The first was the internal barrier,
associated with guilt, shame and self-protection, as well as with immature
development and the attempt to minimize effects on their own. The second barrier was
related to the relationships with other people, marked by family problems, power
relations with the aggressor, repercussions of the complaint and the fragility of
the support network. The third referred to the social world, especially to
stereotypes regarding sexuality
.Another repercussion of violence against children that does not reveal the magnitude
of the problem is the silence of the victims about sexual abuse, evidenced by the
high number of revelations only in adult life. Thus, the longer the time elapsed for
disclosure, the lower the criminalization rates of the aggressors and the greater
the effects and aggravations against the health of the victims
.It is well known that children who have been sexually abused experience the negative
effects of this throughout life. The most common manifestations are inadequate
school performance, psychological problems (depression, anxiety, suicide attempt and
post-traumatic stress disorder) and personal relationships. They can also be victims
in other relationships that occur in different spaces of society and present
difficulties in following socially imposed norms
,
,
.A study of 222 men and 660 women that had been victims of childsexual abuse found
that girls were more likely (1.2-2.2 times) than boys to seek medical care because
of physical health problems, such as digestive, locomotor and genitourinary
symptoms. The authors describe that childsexual abuse is responsible for generating
costs for the health system and highlights the need for qualified services to treat
physical and mental health problems of sexually abused girls and boys
.Short-term and long-term health problems triggered by the sexual abuse of girls
highlight the importance of recognizing and coping with this problem through actions
planned and implemented by professionals responsible for the care of children,
adolescents and women in health services.A study conducted with adults who experienced sexual abuse in childhood emphasized
that care services need to recognize the barriers that prevent denunciation, since
abuse usually remains hidden for a long time because the understanding about
sexuality is not disclosed to children
.Meeting the care needs of girls and women who had suffered sexual abuse in childhood
requires the presence of a physical space in the health service that guarantees
privacy and hospitality, as well as qualified professionals to establish a
relationship of trust and recognition of health needs. This highlights the
importance of training and improving the approach to this subject.A Canadian study on the skills, education, and experience of professionals
responsible for caring for children has found that higher education does not
guarantee preparation for care practice. However, it found that participating in
training courses proposed by the health service is significant when associated to
the time of professional practice
.In this perspective, we highlight the importance of inserting reflections and
discussions on this theme in the curricula of the health, education, social
assistance and justice undergraduate courses, which are somehow responsible for the
assistance of sexually abused girls, adolescents and women in the childhood. In
addition, it is necessary to create permanent education programs on child sexual
abuse in the care and coping services in order to promote the updating and
qualification of professionals regarding the laws, public policies and service
protocols, which are subject to continuous changes.Assistance to victims of childsexual abuse has been a challenge for both the
professionals and the services that make up the support network, since the
determination thereof lies in the historical and social construction of children and
women in society. This research provides support for the understanding of how this
social phenomenon is expressed among Brazilian women in order to support the
development and implementation of public policies aimed at prevention and reduction
of cases.In addition, it allows health professionals, and especially nurses, responsible for
serving women in different generational moments to reflect on this problem in order
to incorporate, in individual or group care, questions that may give visibility to
situations of sexual abuse in the childhood that remain silenced by users.The limitations of this study are in the tweeted reports, which restrict the
description of the sexual abuse experienced in childhood to 140 words and describe
experiences that happened in previous years. Confirmation of the veracity of the
cases consists of a limitation of the field of research that addresses testimonials
of adults who had been sexually abused in childhood, since they are usually based on
late memories. However, these limitations do not invalidate the study because the
campaign has stimulated and facilitated the free expression of participants and the
sharing of situations of childsexual abuse.Therefore, this research presents advances in the field of knowledge about childsexual abuse by pointing issues that allow understanding the unveiling of cases in
adult life, considering the perspective of gender and generation. In addition, the
research provides subsidies for nurses to develop care practices that help victims
to express and deal with the traumatic experience, as opposed to the
re-victimization of women.
Conclusion
This study revealed that childsexual abuse has multiple faces that could be revealed
in the empirical categories that emerged from the narratives of the women who
participated in the social network campaign. The results disclosed the submissive
situations of gender and generation, determined by the social construction of
femininity, masculinity and childhood.The consequences of sexual violence were also highlighted, represented by physical,
psychological, emotional and social damages, of acute or late character. This
highlights the importance of developing and implementing measures to protect,
prevent, intervene and confront this problem, which has still been veiled in
society.The creation and use of campaigns in social networks is valid for disseminating the
theme and contributes to the increase of denunciations. In addition, it makes
possible to understand the experiences lived by sexually abused women in childhood
and can trigger responses from public policies, institutions and professionals
responsible for care.In this perspective, the Internet can be an important tool for the rapid unveiling of
the facets of sexual abuse against children. However, the results of studies like
this must sustain and mobilize intervention actions, qualifying institutions and
professionals for the prevention and confrontation of child violence.
Authors: Márcia Regina de Oliveira Pedroso; Franciéle Marabotti Costa Leite Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health Date: 2022-08-10 Impact factor: 4.614