Stewart Sherry H, Strickland Noelle, Noguiera-Arjona Raquel, Wekerle Christine
Department of Psychiatry, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS, Canada.
Mood, Anxiety, and Addiction Comorbidity (MAAC) Lab, Department of Psychology and Neuroscience, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS, Canada.
Front Psychol. 2024 Aug 15;15:1370524. doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1370524. eCollection 2024.
Alcohol-involved sexual assault (AISA) survivors who were drinking at the time of the assault may be at risk of internalizing victim-blaming myths and stigma. Cognitive-behavioral models posit the link between AISA and negative emotional outcomes may be explained through maladaptive appraisals and coping - i.e., characterological and behavioral self-blame, shame, low self-compassion (i.e., high self-coldness, low self-caring), and fear of self-compassion.
Using a cross-sectional design and community sample of younger adults ( = 409 Canadians, = 28.2 years old, 51.3% women), we examined these mechanisms' unique effects in mediating the associations between AISA and posttraumatic stress, general anxiety, and depressive symptoms, respectively.
In terms of gender differences, AISA was more common, self-coldness higher, and general anxiety symptoms more frequent in women, and fear of self-compassion was higher in men. Using structural equation modeling that controlled for gender and the overlap between outcomes, shame emerged as the strongest mediator linking AISA with all emotional outcomes. Fear of self-compassion also partially mediated the AISA-posttraumatic stress symptom association, self-coldness partially mediated the AISA-general anxiety symptom association, and characterological self-blame fully mediated the AISA-depressive symptom association.
Avoidance-based processes, ruminative-/worry-based cognitions, and negative self-evaluative cognitions may be distinctly relevant for AISA-related posttraumatic stress, general anxiety, and depressive symptoms, respectively, after accounting for the overarching mediation through shame. These internalized stigma-related mechanisms may be useful to prioritize in treatment to potentially reduce AISA-related negative emotional outcomes, particularly for AISA survivors with posttraumatic stress, general anxiety, and/or depressive symptoms.
在遭受性侵犯时饮酒的涉酒精性性侵犯(AISA)幸存者可能面临将受害者归咎的错误观念和污名内化的风险。认知行为模型认为,AISA与负面情绪结果之间的联系可以通过适应不良的评估和应对来解释,即性格和行为上的自我责备、羞耻感、低自我同情(即高自我冷漠、低自我关怀)以及对自我同情的恐惧。
我们采用横断面设计,并以年轻成年人(409名加拿大人,平均年龄28.2岁,51.3%为女性)为社区样本,分别研究了这些机制在介导AISA与创伤后应激、广泛性焦虑和抑郁症状之间关联时的独特作用。
在性别差异方面,AISA在女性中更为常见,自我冷漠程度更高,广泛性焦虑症状更频繁,而男性对自我同情的恐惧更高。通过控制性别和结果之间的重叠的结构方程模型分析,羞耻感成为将AISA与所有情绪结果联系起来的最强中介因素。对自我同情的恐惧也部分介导了AISA与创伤后应激症状的关联,自我冷漠部分介导了AISA与广泛性焦虑症状的关联,而性格上的自我责备完全介导了AISA与抑郁症状的关联。
在考虑了羞耻感这一总体中介因素之后,基于回避的过程、反复思考/担忧的认知以及消极的自我评估认知可能分别与AISA相关的创伤后应激、广泛性焦虑和抑郁症状有明显关联。这些与内化污名相关的机制可能有助于在治疗中确定优先次序,以潜在地减少与AISA相关的负面情绪结果,特别是对于有创伤后应激、广泛性焦虑和/或抑郁症状的AISA幸存者。