Authors
Candice Feiring, Charles Cleland
Publication date
2007/11/1
Journal
Child Abuse & Neglect
Volume
31
Issue
11-12
Pages
1169-1186
Publisher
Pergamon
Description
OBJECTIVE
The purpose of this study was to examine patterns of change in attributions for childhood sexual abuse (CSA) over a 6-year period and whether such patterns were related to abuse severity, age, gender, and subsequent symptoms of depression and PTSD.
METHODOLOGY
One-hundred and sixty children, 8–15 years old, were interviewed within 8 weeks of the time the CSA was reported to child protective services (i.e., the time of abuse discovery). Follow-up interviews were conducted 1-year later on 147, and 6 years later on 121 of the original participants. Abuse-specific attributions were obtained using two methods. Participants first responded to an open-ended interview question about why they believed the CSA had happened to them and then completed a rating scale about the extent to which possible attributions for the CSA applied to them (e.g., “Because I was not smart enough”).
RESULTS …
Total citations
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