Childhood Sexual Abuse and Its Relationship to High-Risk Behavior in Women Volunteering for an HIV and STD Prevention Intervention
Judith Greenberg; Michael Hennessy; Julie Lifshay; Saundra Kahn-Krieger; Debra Bartelli; Ann Downer; Melanie Bliss
Aids and Behavior 3(2): 149-156
1999
ISSN/ISBN: 1090-7165 DOI: 10.1023/a:1025440124211Document Number: 533779
This study examines the extent of childhood sexual abuse and its relationship to risky sexual and drug-using behaviors, condom use, and lifetime sexually transmitted diseases (STDs) in women volunteering for the Wings intervention in New York City, Baltimore, and Seattle. Responses to structured interviews from 825 eligible women recruited from the community, clinics, and drug programs in 1995 and 1996 were analyzed. Thirty-eight percent to 66% of women across sites reported childhood sexual abuse before age 18. Q statistics and t tests measured the bivariate relationships between sexual abuse and outcomes. Then regression analysis was used to control for ethnicity and race, age, age at first intercourse, and site in predicting the adjusted effects of sexual abuse. Compared to nonabused women, abused women reported more lifetime partners, more episodes of different STDs, lower odds of using condoms at most recent sexual intercourse with main partners, and increased odds of using drugs or alcohol before sex. Researchers need to develop and test Std and Hiv interventions tailored for victims of early sexual abuse and compare them with more general interventions for at-risk women.