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Journal Article

Citation

Moore KA, Nord CW, Peterson JL. Fam. Plann. Perspect. 1989; 21(3): 110-114.

Affiliation

Child Trends, Inc., Washington, D.C.

Copyright

(Copyright © 1989, Alan Guttmacher Institute)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

2759216

Abstract

Data from the 1987 round of the National Survey of Children indicate that seven percent of Americans aged 18-22 have experienced at least one episode of nonvoluntary sexual intercourse. Women were more likely than men to report having had such an experience, with just under half of all nonvoluntary experiences among women occurring before the age of 14. Multiple classification analysis reveals that white women who had lived apart from their parents before age 16, those who had been brought up in poverty, those who had had a physical, emotional or mental limitation when they were young, those whose parents had been heavy drinkers, those whose parents had used illegal drugs and those whose parents had smoked cigarettes when they themselves were teenagers were at significantly greater risk for experiencing sexual abuse. Six percent of young white women with no risk factors, nine percent of those with one, 26 percent of those with two, and 68 percent of those with three or more had been sexually abused before or during adolescence.


Language: en

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