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Journal Article

Citation

Feehan M, Nada-Raja S, Martin JA, Langley JD. Violence Vict. 2001; 16(1): 49-63.

Affiliation

Marketing and Planning Systems, Waltham, MA 02451, USA.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2001, Springer Publishing)

DOI

unavailable

PMID

11281224

Abstract

Among a birth cohort of New Zealand's 21-year-olds, 41% experienced physical or sexual assault in the previous 12 months. The level of psychological distress experienced by the 374 victims was determined in interviews assessing for symptoms indicative of posttraumatic stress disorder and ratings of impairment in activities of daily living. Of the 141 women victims, 32.6% were identified as experiencing psychological distress as were 9.9% of the 233 men. For men, bivariate analyses showed psychological distress was significantly associated with factors indicative of increased assault severity, and for women an increased likelihood of distress was associated with the location of assault and the relationship to the assailant. Positive indicators of social support were not significantly associated with less adverse psychological outcomes. However, for both men and women, resisting the assailant was associated with a reduced likelihood of psychological distress. Multivariate analyses revealed that for both women and men, unemployment uniquely predicted variance in distress, over and above that accounted for by characteristics of the assault.


Language: en

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