Mitra Atreyi, Swendeman Dallas, Sumstine Stephanie, Sorin Cierra Raine, Bloom Brittnie E, Wagman Jennifer A
University of California Global Health Institute, San Francisco, CA, USA.
University of California, Los Angeles, CA, USA.
J Interpers Violence. 2022 Nov;37(21-22):NP19468-NP19490. doi: 10.1177/08862605211042813. Epub 2021 Sep 8.
In order to continue pushing college campuses to the forefront of survivor-centered practice and student-centered care, it is imperative that the barriers students experience in accessing campus sexual violence resource centers be documented and addressed. This research evaluates student and staff perceptions of barriers to accessing the Campus Assault Resources and Education (CARE) offices on three University of California (UC) campuses. Data were collected by researchers from UC Speaks Up, a cross-campus research initiative at UC Los Angeles (UCLA), UC Santa Barbara (UCSB), and UC San Diego (UCSD) aimed at understanding factors that both contribute to and prevent sexual violence among college students. This analysis only included data that yielded insights into CARE's accessibility. Thematic analysis of 63 interviews and 27 focus group discussions was conducted using Dedoose. The following six thematic codes emerged from the data: (1) awareness of office, (2) confidentiality of services, (3) physical accessibility, (4) accessibility for vulnerable and marginalized groups, (5) utilization experiences, and (6) limited institutional support. To increase the accessibility of sexual violence resource centers in higher education, this study indicates that universities and campus sexual violence resource centers should (1) encourage survivor-centered cross-campus collaborations between sexual violence resource centers and other campus entries, (2) add more trainings that are tailored to the needs of vulnerable and marginalized communities, (3) increase the resource's campus-wide office exposure through multiple prevention education opportunities, and (4) better fund sexual violence resource centers. Implications for future research are discussed to maximize this study's public health impact.
为了继续推动大学校园在以幸存者为中心的实践和以学生为中心的关怀方面走在前列,必须记录并解决学生在获取校园性暴力资源中心服务时所遇到的障碍。本研究评估了加州大学(UC)三个校区的学生和工作人员对获取校园性侵资源与教育(CARE)办公室服务障碍的看法。数据由加州大学“大声说出来”项目的研究人员收集,该项目是一项跨校区研究计划,涉及加州大学洛杉矶分校(UCLA)、加州大学圣巴巴拉分校(UCSB)和加州大学圣地亚哥分校(UCSD),旨在了解促成和预防大学生性暴力的因素。本分析仅纳入了能为CARE办公室的可及性提供见解的数据。使用Dedoose软件对63次访谈和27次焦点小组讨论进行了主题分析。数据中出现了以下六个主题编码:(1)办公室知晓度,(2)服务保密性,(3)实体可及性,(4)弱势群体和边缘化群体的可及性,(5)使用体验,以及(6)机构支持有限。为了提高高等教育中性暴力资源中心的可及性,本研究表明,大学和校园性暴力资源中心应:(1)鼓励性暴力资源中心与其他校园机构之间开展以幸存者为中心的跨校区合作;(2)增加针对弱势群体和边缘化社区需求的培训;(3)通过多种预防教育机会提高该资源在校园范围内的办公室曝光度;(4)为性暴力资源中心提供更好的资金支持。文中还讨论了对未来研究的启示,以最大化本研究对公共卫生的影响。