| Literature DB >> 32969319 |
Mengyao Lu1, Jane Barlow1, Franziska Meinck2,3, Yumeng Wu4.
Abstract
While existing studies have examined the effectiveness of school-based child sexual abuse (CSA) prevention programs in China, there is currently little qualitative evidence on how stakeholders view these programs and research on CSA in China more generally. To address this research gap, the aims of this study were to explore stakeholders' perspectives on: (a) school-based CSA prevention programs in China; (b) the components of these programs; (c) CSA research in China. Qualitative semi-structured interviews were conducted with 21 participants in Beijing and a county under Lanzhou City, China. Interview transcripts were systematically coded and emerging themes were developed from the codes. An inductive thematic analysis approach was utilized to analyze the interview data. Participants' perspectives on school-based CSA prevention programs included: (a) recognition of the importance of school-based CSA prevention programs; (b) fear about a possible negative impact on children participating in such programs; (c) assessment that school-based CSA prevention programs alone are not enough to prevent CSA. Components that participants thought needed to be part of Chinese school-based CSA prevention programs were: (a) content regarding online-facilitated CSA; (b) the use of a rights-based approach; and (c) greater parental and community involvement. Participants also identified factors that have both fostered the implementation of CSA research (e.g., the growing awareness of CSA in the central government) and prevented researchers from effectively conducting CSA research: (a) lack of national data; (b) inadequate government support; and (c) barriers to research collaboration among organizations. The findings indicate that while CSA prevention programs are on the whole regarded positively by key stakeholders in China, a number of important concerns were identified. Our study highlighted a number of ways in which future CSA prevention programs and research on CSA could be strengthened in the Chinese context.Entities:
Keywords: prevention of child abuse; sexual abuse; treatment/intervention
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32969319 PMCID: PMC8980448 DOI: 10.1177/0886260520959630
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Interpers Violence ISSN: 0886-2605
Sample Characteristics.
| Participants | ID | Number of Participants ( |
| Professionals | ||
| Nongovernmental organization (NGO) officials | E4, E5, E8 | 4 |
| University researchers | E1, E3, E6, E7 | 4 |
| Inter-governmental organization official | E2 | 1 |
| Practitioners | ||
| School social workers | V1, V2, V3 | 3 |
| Volunteer | V4 | 1 |
| Parents | P1, P2, P3, P4, P5, P6 | 6 |
| Elementary school teachers | T1, T2 | 2 |
| Total | 21 | |
| Sex | ||
| Female | 19 | |
| Male | 2 |
Key Components Identified by the First Author (Lu et al., 2020).
| Name of the Component | Description |
| Defining child sexual abuse | Teaching children about what CSA means |
| Private parts of the body | Teaching children to identify the private parts of their bodies, or to distinguish public and private parts |
| Safe and unsafe touches | Teaching children to recognize appropriate and inappropriate touches and distinguish between these touches |
| Self-protection skills | Teaching children self-protection and a range of skills for responding in potentially abusive situations |
| Children are not the ones to blame | Teaching children that sexual abuse of a child is never the child’s fault |
| Safe and unsafe situations | Teaching children to recognize safe and unsafe situations |
| Awareness of personal rights/body ownership | Teaching children their body belongs to them and no one can touch it without their permission |
| Offender characteristics and approaches | Teaching children that the perpetrators can be someone known or unknown to them and providing information about grooming strategies including gifts and favors |
| Other harms that can be experienced by children | Teaching children about different forms of harm to children including physical and emotional abuse, witnessing domestic/family violence, or peer victimization such as bullying |
| Good and bad secrets | Teaching children the difference between good and bad secrets, or to distinguish secrets and surprises |
| Who to tell | Teaching children about the importance of disclosure and pointing them to appropriate and effective sources of help |