1 University of Michigan School of Public Health, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.
2 University of Michigan Injury Center, Department of Emergency Medicine, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.
Health Educ Behav. 2018 Aug;45(4):625-634. doi: 10.1177/1090198117741941. Epub 2017 Dec 3.
Sexual violence (SV) is a widespread public health problem among adolescents and emerging adults with significant short- and long-term consequences. Young people living in urban, disadvantaged communities with high rates of violence may be especially at risk for SV victimization. Understanding interconnections between different forms of violence is critical to reducing SV risk among youth. Participants were youth ( N = 599) ages 14 to 24 years ( M = 20.05, SD = 2.42) presenting to an urban emergency department with a Level 1 trauma designation as part of a prospective cohort study and followed-up for 24 months. We used logistic regression to examine the probability of reporting SV during the 24-month follow-up based on baseline reports of community and peer violence exposure, accounting for previous SV victimization, substance use, and sociodemographic characteristics. Among youth presenting to an urban emergency department, 22% of youth not seeking care for a sexual assault reported any lifetime SV (forced and/or substance-induced sexual intercourse) at baseline. During the 24-month follow-up, 12% reported SV victimization. We found high community violence exposure (odds ratio [OR] = 2.96, 95% confidence interval [CI] [1.01, 8.68]) and peer violence exposure (OR = 1.58, 95% CI [1.19, 2.08]) were associated with increased odds of reporting SV during follow-up in addition to previous SV victimization (OR = 2.71, 95% CI [1.45, 5.09]). Sex, age, parent education, and alcohol or other drug use at baseline were not associated with odds of SV during follow-up. Investigating interconnections between SV victimization and other forms of violence across socioecological levels provides an opportunity to advance SV research and identify promising avenues for prevention based on other violence prevention research. Future strategies for SV prevention that incorporate community and peer components as well as SV-specific content may help reduce SV victimization among youth living in urban, disadvantaged communities.
性暴力(SV)是青少年和新兴成年人中普遍存在的公共卫生问题,具有重大的短期和长期后果。生活在城市、弱势社区、暴力发生率高的年轻人可能特别容易遭受 SV 侵害。了解不同形式暴力之间的相互关系对于降低青少年 SV 风险至关重要。参与者为年龄在 14 至 24 岁(M = 20.05,SD = 2.42)的年轻人,共 599 人,他们因一级创伤被送到城市急诊室,作为前瞻性队列研究的一部分,并进行了 24 个月的随访。我们使用逻辑回归来检查基于社区和同伴暴力暴露的基线报告,考虑到先前的 SV 受害、物质使用和社会人口学特征,在 24 个月的随访期间报告 SV 的可能性。在到城市急诊室就诊的年轻人中,22%没有因性侵犯而寻求治疗的年轻人在基线时报告了任何终生 SV(强迫和/或物质诱导的性交)。在 24 个月的随访期间,有 12%的人报告了 SV 受害。我们发现,高社区暴力暴露(优势比[OR] = 2.96,95%置信区间[CI] [1.01, 8.68])和同伴暴力暴露(OR = 1.58,95%CI [1.19, 2.08])除了先前的 SV 受害(OR = 2.71,95%CI [1.45, 5.09])之外,与随访期间报告 SV 的几率增加相关。性别、年龄、父母教育程度以及基线时的酒精或其他药物使用与随访期间 SV 的几率无关。在社会生态层面上调查 SV 受害与其他形式暴力之间的相互关系,为推进 SV 研究并根据其他暴力预防研究确定有希望的预防途径提供了机会。未来的 SV 预防策略,将社区和同伴因素以及 SV 特定内容结合起来,可能有助于减少生活在城市弱势社区的年轻人的 SV 受害。