RAND Corporation, Santa Monica, CA 90401-3208, USA.
Child Abuse Negl. 2012 Jan;36(1):21-31. doi: 10.1016/j.chiabu.2011.07.005. Epub 2012 Jan 20.
Childhood abuse has been linked to negative sequelae for women later in life including drug and alcohol use and violence as victim or perpetrator and may also affect the development of women's social networks. Childhood abuse is prevalent among at-risk populations of women (such as the homeless) and thus may have a stronger impact on their social networks. We conducted a study to: (a) develop a typology of sheltered homeless women's social networks; (b) determine whether childhood abuse was associated with the social networks of sheltered homeless women; and (c) determine whether those associations remained after accounting for past-year substance abuse and recent intimate partner abuse.
A probability sample of 428 homeless women from temporary shelter settings in Los Angeles County completed a personal network survey that provided respondent information as well as information about their network members' demographics and level of interaction with each other. Cluster analyses identified groups of women who shared specific social network characteristics. Multinomial logistic regressions revealed variables associated with group membership.
We identified three groups of women with differing social network characteristics: low-risk networks, densely connected risky networks (dense, risky), and sparsely connected risky networks (sparse, risky). Multinomial logistic regressions indicated that membership in the sparse, risky network group, when compared to the low-risk group, was associated with history of childhood physical abuse (but not sexual or emotional abuse). Recent drug abuse was associated with membership in both risky network groups; however, the association of childhood physical abuse with sparse, risky network group membership remained.
Although these findings support theories proposing that the experience of childhood abuse can shape women's social networks, they suggest that it may be childhood physical abuse that has the most impact among homeless women.
The effects of childhood physical abuse should be more actively investigated in clinical settings, especially those frequented by homeless women, particularly with respect to the formation of social networks in social contexts that may expose these women to greater risks.
童年期虐待与女性晚年的负面后果有关,包括吸毒、酗酒以及作为受害者或加害者遭受暴力,还可能影响女性社会网络的发展。童年期虐待在高危女性群体(如无家可归者)中较为普遍,因此可能对她们的社会网络产生更强烈的影响。我们开展了一项研究:(a) 制定庇护所中无家可归女性社会网络的分类法;(b) 确定童年期虐待是否与庇护所中无家可归女性的社会网络有关;(c) 确定在考虑过去一年的物质滥用和近期亲密伴侣虐待后,这些关联是否仍然存在。
洛杉矶县临时庇护所环境中的 428 名无家可归女性参与了一项概率抽样个人网络调查,该调查提供了受访者信息以及其网络成员的人口统计学信息和彼此之间互动程度的信息。聚类分析确定了具有特定社会网络特征的女性群体。多项逻辑回归揭示了与群体成员身份相关的变量。
我们确定了具有不同社会网络特征的三组女性:低风险网络、密集连接的高危网络(密集、高危)和稀疏连接的高危网络(稀疏、高危)。多项逻辑回归表明,与低风险组相比,稀疏、高危网络组的成员身份与童年期身体虐待史有关(但与性虐待或情感虐待无关)。近期药物滥用与两个高危网络群体的成员身份有关;然而,童年期身体虐待与稀疏、高危网络群体成员身份的关联仍然存在。
尽管这些发现支持了提出的童年期虐待经历可以塑造女性社会网络的理论,但它们表明,无家可归女性中,可能是童年期身体虐待产生了最大影响。
在临床环境中,特别是在无家可归女性常去的环境中,应更积极地调查童年期身体虐待的影响,特别是在这些女性所处的社会环境中形成社会网络时,更应调查其对这些女性的影响,因为这些环境可能使她们面临更大的风险。