Literature DB >> 9134267

The prevalence of child sexual abuse: integrative review adjustment for potential response and measurement biases.

K M Gorey1, D R Leslie.   

Abstract

This integrative review synthesizes the finding of 16 cross-sectional surveys (25 hypotheses) on the prevalence of child abuse among nonclinical, North American samples. It is essentially a research literature on sexual abuse; only one of the studies assessed physical abuse, and there has not yet been a single study of prevalent child emotional abuse nor neglect. The following summative inferences were made: (1) response rates diminished significantly over time, M = 68% prior to 1985 and M = 49% for more recent surveys, p < .05; (2) unadjusted estimates of the prevalent experience among women and men of childhood sexual abuse was 22.3% and 8.5%, respectively; (3) study response rates and child abuse operational definitions together accounted for half of the observed variability in their abuse prevalence estimates, R2 = .500, p < .05; (4) female and male child sexual abuse prevalence estimates adjusted for response rates (60% or more) were respectively, 16.8% and 7.9%, and adjusted for operational definitions (excluding the broadest, noncontact category) they were 14.5% and 7.2%; (5) after adjustment for response rates and definitions, the prevalence of child sexual abuse was not found to vary significantly over the three decades reviewed. Given the large human costs, both personal and social, of child abuse, and the identified gap in the requisite knowledge needed to steer effective preventive and treatment interventions, it is time to invest in a large, methodologically rigorous, population-based study of child abuse which, if it does nothing else, spares no expense in ensuring very high participation.

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Year:  1997        PMID: 9134267     DOI: 10.1016/s0145-2134(96)00180-9

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Child Abuse Negl        ISSN: 0145-2134


  44 in total

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Review 5.  Somatic symptom reporting in women and men.

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Review 6.  The long-term impact of early adversity on late-life psychiatric disorders.

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8.  Coping self-efficacy mediates the effects of negative cognitions on posttraumatic distress.

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9.  Impact of child sex abuse on adult psychopathology: a genetically and epigenetically informed investigation.

Authors:  Steven R H Beach; Gene H Brody; Man Kit Lei; Frederick X Gibbons; Meg Gerrard; Ronald L Simons; Carolyn E Cutrona; Robert A Philibert
Journal:  J Fam Psychol       Date:  2013-02

10.  Childhood abuse and early menarche: findings from the black women's health study.

Authors:  Lauren A Wise; Julie R Palmer; Emily F Rothman; Lynn Rosenberg
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2009-05-14       Impact factor: 9.308

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