Alegría-Flores Kei, Raker Kelli, Pleasants Robert K, Weaver Mark A, Weinberger Morris
1 The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, NC, USA.
2 Durham Veterans Affairs Medical Center, NC, USA.
J Interpers Violence. 2017 Apr;32(7):1103-1126. doi: 10.1177/0886260515587666. Epub 2016 Jul 11.
Sexual assault, stalking, dating violence, and intimate partner violence, herein collectively termed interpersonal violence (IV), are public health problems affecting 20% to 25% of female college students. Currently, One Act is one of the few IV prevention training programs at universities that teach students bystander skills to intervene in low- and high-risk IV situations. The objectives of this study were 1) to evaluate One Act's effects on date rape attitudes and behaviors, and bystanders' confidence, willingness to help, and behavior, and 2) to compare the effects on bystander skills between One Act and Helping Advocates for Violence Ending Now (HAVEN), an IV response training program with similar participants. Data were collected over 2 years, before and after One Act and HAVEN trainings. We measured outcomes with four scales: College Date Rape Attitudes and Behaviors, Bystander Confidence, Willingness to Help, and Bystander Behavior. The analysis compared within- and between-group mean differences in scale scores pre- and post-trainings using linear mixed models. One Act showed improvements for date rape attitudes and behaviors ( p < .001), bystander's confidence ( p < .001), and willingness to help ( p < .001). One Act participants' bystander confidence improved more ( p = .006), on average, than HAVEN's. The differences in the two trainings' effects on bystander willingness to help and behavior had similar patterns but were not statistically significant. We found a larger positive impact on bystander confidence among students who participated in the bystander prevention training compared with the response training. Further research is needed to improve the measures for bystander behavior and measure the bystander trainings' larger impact on the community.
性侵犯、跟踪骚扰、约会暴力和亲密伴侣暴力,在此统称为人际暴力(IV),是影响20%至25%女大学生的公共卫生问题。目前,“一法案”是大学中为数不多的人际暴力预防培训项目之一,该项目教授学生旁观者技能,以便在低风险和高风险人际暴力情况下进行干预。本研究的目的是:1)评估“一法案”对约会强奸态度和行为、旁观者的信心、帮助意愿及行为的影响;2)比较“一法案”与“立即终结暴力援助倡导者”(HAVEN)这一针对类似参与者的人际暴力应对培训项目在旁观者技能方面的影响。在“一法案”和HAVEN培训前后的两年时间里收集了数据。我们用四个量表来衡量结果:大学约会强奸态度和行为量表、旁观者信心量表、帮助意愿量表和旁观者行为量表。分析使用线性混合模型比较了培训前后组内和组间量表得分的平均差异。“一法案”在约会强奸态度和行为(p <.001)、旁观者信心(p <.001)和帮助意愿(p <.001)方面都有改善。“一法案”参与者的旁观者信心平均比HAVEN参与者提高得更多(p =.006)。两项培训在旁观者帮助意愿和行为方面的影响差异具有相似模式,但无统计学意义。我们发现,与应对培训相比,参与旁观者预防培训的学生在旁观者信心方面受到的积极影响更大。需要进一步研究以改进旁观者行为的测量方法,并衡量旁观者培训对社区的更大影响。