Edson College of Nursing and Health Innovation, Arizona State University.
Department of Psychology, Morehead State University.
Health Psychol. 2021 Dec;40(12):940-950. doi: 10.1037/hea0001048. Epub 2020 Nov 30.
Sexual aggression remains a significant public health problem, with the majority of sexual assaults involving alcohol. Founded upon an experimental medicine approach to behavior change, the current study used a proximal change experiment to target and test emotion regulation (ER) as a mechanism underlying alcohol-involved sexual aggression.
Heavy episodic drinking men aged 21-30 with a sexual assault perpetration history (N = 209) were randomly assigned to a brief, online, ER-focused cognitive restructuring or mindfulness intervention or to control. Intervention effects were evaluated during sober and intoxicated states through laboratory-based alcohol administration (target BrAC = .08%). Intoxicated and sober participants completed a proximal change protocol that included implementing ER skills during a sexual aggression analogue that assessed relevant emotions and intentions.
Path analysis demonstrated that relative to control, the cognitive restructuring intervention improved emotional modulation and emotional clarity, resulting in lower sexual arousal and anger, respectively, followed by decreased sexual coercion intentions. The mindfulness intervention yielded mixed results, predicting decreased sexual aggression intentions compared to control but also predicting stronger coercive tactic intentions in intoxicated men with more severe sexual aggression histories. Both interventions improved emotional acceptance relative to control, but only for sober men.
Overall, the current study demonstrated that ER-focused interventions improved proximal ER skills associated with reduced sexual aggression intentions, signifying ER as an important mechanism for changing sexually aggressive behavior. Because intervention efficacy varied by intoxication state, further research is needed to assess the effectiveness of ER interventions targeting real-world alcohol-involved sexual aggression. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2022 APA, all rights reserved).
性侵犯仍然是一个严重的公共卫生问题,大多数性侵犯都涉及酒精。本研究基于行为改变的实验医学方法,采用近端变化实验来针对并测试情绪调节(ER)作为酒精相关性侵犯的潜在机制。
具有性侵犯犯罪史的 21-30 岁重度间歇性饮酒男性(N=209)被随机分配到一个简短的在线情绪调节焦点认知重构或正念干预或对照组。通过实验室酒精给药(目标 BrAC=0.08%)评估干预清醒和醉酒状态下的效果。醉酒和清醒的参与者完成了一个近端变化方案,包括在性侵犯模拟中实施情绪调节技能,评估相关情绪和意图。
路径分析表明,与对照组相比,认知重构干预改善了情绪调节和情绪清晰度,分别导致较低的性唤起和愤怒,从而降低了性胁迫意图。正念干预产生了混合结果,与对照组相比,预测了较低的性侵犯意图,但也预测了在性侵犯历史更严重的醉酒男性中更强的胁迫策略意图。两种干预措施都改善了与对照组相比的情绪接受度,但仅适用于清醒男性。
总的来说,本研究表明,以 ER 为重点的干预措施改善了与降低性侵犯意图相关的近端 ER 技能,表明 ER 是改变性侵犯行为的重要机制。由于干预效果因醉酒状态而异,需要进一步研究评估针对现实世界中与酒精有关的性侵犯的 ER 干预措施的有效性。