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Incest and Other Forms of Sexual Abuse (From The Battered Child, P 286-300, 1987, Ray E Helfer and Ruth S Kempe, eds. -- See NCJ-111195)

NCJ Number
111209
Author(s)
R Krugman; D P H Jones
Date Published
1987
Length
15 pages
Annotation
This paper summarizes child sexual abuse incidence studies, reviews some aspects of the etiology of child sexual abuse, focuses on the recognition of all forms of child sexual abuse and the multidisciplinary process of data gathering and assessment, and reviews the present status of knowledge on the reliability and validity of children's statements on their sexual victimization.
Abstract
Although there are no reliable incidence data for sexual abuse in the United States, estimates are that 3-5 percent of adult women and 1-2 percent of adult men were sexually abused as children. The etiology of child sexual abuse has four preconditions: the motivation to abuse children sexually, the weakening of internal inhibitors against child sexual abuse, the overcoming of external inhibitors, and the breakdown of the child's resistance. Child sexual abuse may be revealed through the victim's ambiguous or direct statements to others, marked changes in the victim's behavior, or medical conditions. Aspects of the medical assessment are the initial evaluation, interview components, physical examination, diagnostic studies, and followup care. Sexually abused children rarely exhibit effects that can be attributed only to sexual abuse, since intrafamilial sexual exploitation is typically associated with neglect, emotional abuse, deprivation, and physical abuse. In validating a child's statement of sexual abuse, it should be examined for explicit detail, and the corroboration provided by secondary factors should be explored. 20 references.