Pearce Margo E, Christian Wayne M, Patterson Katharina, Norris Kat, Moniruzzaman Akm, Craib Kevin J P, Schechter Martin T, Spittal Patricia M
Center for Health Evaluation and Outcome Sciences, Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
Soc Sci Med. 2008 Jun;66(11):2185-94. doi: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2008.03.034.
Recent Indigenist scholarship has situated high rates of traumatic life experiences, including sexual abuse, among Indigenous peoples of North America within the larger context of their status as colonized peoples. Sexual abuse has been linked to many negative health outcomes including mental, sexual and drug-related vulnerabilities. There is a paucity of research in Canada addressing the relationship between antecedent sexual abuse and negative health outcomes among Aboriginal people including elevated risk of HIV infection. The primary objectives of this study were to determine factors associated with sexual abuse among participants of the Cedar Project, a cohort of young Aboriginal people between the ages of 14 and 30 years who use injection and non-injection drugs in two urban centres in British Columbia, Canada; and to locate findings through a lens of historical and intergenerational trauma. We utilized post-colonial perspectives in research design, problem formulation and the interpretation of results. Multivariate modeling was used to determine the extent to which a history of sexual abuse was predictive of negative health outcomes and vulnerability to HIV infection. Of the 543 eligible participants, 48% reported ever having experienced sexual abuse; 69% of sexually abused participants were female. The median age of first sexual abuse was 6 years for both female and male participants. After adjusting for sociodemographic variables and factors of historical trauma, sexually abused participants were more likely to have ever been on the streets for more than three nights, to have ever self-harmed, to have suicide ideation, to have attempted suicide, to have a diagnosis of mental illness, to have been in the emergency department within the previous 6 months, to have had over 20 lifetime sexual partners, to have ever been paid for sex and to have ever overdosed. The prevalence and consequences of sexual abuse among Cedar Project participants are of grave concern. Sexual trauma will continue to impact individuals, families and communities until unresolved historical trauma is meaningfully addressed in client-driven, culturally safe programming.
近期的本土主义学术研究将北美原住民中包括性虐待在内的高创伤性生活经历置于他们作为被殖民民族这一更大背景下。性虐待与许多负面健康结果相关,包括心理、性方面以及与毒品相关的易感性。在加拿大,针对原住民中先前性虐待与负面健康结果(包括感染艾滋病毒风险升高)之间关系的研究匮乏。本研究的主要目标是确定与雪松项目参与者中性虐待相关的因素,该项目是一群年龄在14至30岁之间、在加拿大不列颠哥伦比亚省两个城市中心使用注射和非注射毒品的年轻原住民;并通过历史和代际创伤的视角来定位研究结果。我们在研究设计、问题制定和结果解释中运用了后殖民视角。采用多变量建模来确定性虐待史在多大程度上可预测负面健康结果以及感染艾滋病毒的易感性。在543名符合条件的参与者中,48%报告曾经历性虐待;性虐待参与者中有69%为女性。男女参与者首次性虐待的中位年龄均为6岁。在调整了社会人口统计学变量和历史创伤因素后,遭受性虐待的参与者更有可能曾在街头流浪超过三晚、曾自我伤害、有自杀意念、曾尝试自杀、被诊断患有精神疾病、在过去6个月内去过急诊室、一生中有超过20个性伴侣、曾以性交易换取金钱以及曾过量用药。雪松项目参与者中性虐待的发生率和后果令人严重关切。性创伤将继续影响个人、家庭和社区,除非在以客户为导向、具有文化安全性的项目中切实解决未解决的历史创伤问题。