Rees Susan, Simpson Lisa, McCormack Clare A, Moussa Batool, Amanatidis Sue
School of Psychiatry, Faculty of Medicine, University of New South Wales, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
Community Health, Sydney Local Area Health District, Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
BMJ Open. 2019 Jul 30;9(7):e026773. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-026773.
Sexual abuse is a strong predictor of future psychiatric problems. A more nuanced qualitative understanding of mental health outcomes, in the context of interpersonal responses from family members towards survivors after sexual abuse, may help to better inform prevention and interventions.
A mixed-methods approach included a qualitative timeline method to map and identify contextual factors and mediating emotional responses associated with mental disorder following sexual abuse.
Participants were adult survivors of sexual abuse, seeking support from the Sexual Assault Counselling Service, Sydney Local Health District, Australia.
Thirty women 18 years and older with current or past mental disorder or symptoms were interviewed between August 2015 and May 2016.
A qualitative timeline interview and the Mini-International Neuropsychiatric Interview (MINI, 5.5.0) were applied.
The MINI prevalence of current post-traumatic stress disorder was 96.6% (n=28) and of major depressive disorder was 82.8% (n=24). More than half (53%) reported suicidal ideation at some time in their lives. Women exposed to childhood sexual abuse reported being ignored, not believed, or threatened with retribution on disclosing the abuse to others, usually adult family members, at or close to the time of the violation(s). Participants described experiences of self-blame, betrayal, and psychosocial vulnerability as being the responses that connected negative disclosure experiences with mental disorder. Participant accounts suggest that these reactions created the foundations for both immediate and long-term adverse psychological outcomes.
A more in-depth understanding of the type and emotional impact of negative responses to disclosure by parents and other family members, and the barriers to adequate support, validation and trust, may inform strategies to avert much of the longer-term emotional difficulties and risks that survivors encounter following childhood abuse experiences. These issues should receive closer attention in research, policy, and practice.
性虐待是未来出现精神问题的一个有力预测因素。在家庭成员对性虐待幸存者的人际反应背景下,对心理健康结果进行更细致入微的定性理解,可能有助于更好地为预防和干预提供信息。
一种混合方法包括定性时间线方法,以梳理和识别与性虐待后精神障碍相关的背景因素和中介情绪反应。
参与者为性虐待成年幸存者,他们在澳大利亚悉尼地方卫生区的性侵犯咨询服务处寻求支持。
2015年8月至2016年5月期间,对30名18岁及以上有当前或过去精神障碍或症状的女性进行了访谈。
采用定性时间线访谈和迷你国际神经精神访谈(MINI,5.5.0版)。
当前创伤后应激障碍的MINI患病率为96.6%(n = 28),重度抑郁症的患病率为82.8%(n = 24)。超过一半(53%)的人报告在其生命中的某个时候有过自杀念头。遭受童年性虐待的女性报告称,在遭受侵犯时或接近侵犯时向他人(通常是成年家庭成员)披露虐待行为后,她们被忽视、不被相信或受到报复威胁。参与者将自责、背叛和心理社会脆弱性的经历描述为将负面披露经历与精神障碍联系起来的反应。参与者的叙述表明,这些反应为即时和长期的不良心理结果奠定了基础。
更深入地了解父母和其他家庭成员对披露的负面反应的类型和情感影响,以及获得充分支持、认可和信任的障碍,可能为制定策略提供信息,以避免幸存者在童年虐待经历后遇到的许多长期情感困难和风险。这些问题在研究、政策和实践中应得到更密切的关注。