Victim and perpetrator characteristics in alcohol/drug-involved sexual violence victimization in the U.S

•This is a national study of substance-involved sexual violence victimization.•Victimization commonly occurs with substance use, by victims and perpetrators.•Alcohol is the most commonly used substance by both victims and perpetrators.•One in 3 alcohol/drug-facilitated rape victims reported involunt...

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Veröffentlicht in:Drug and alcohol dependence 2021-09, Vol.226, p.108839-108839, Article 108839
Hauptverfasser: Basile, Kathleen C., Smith, Sharon G., Liu, Yang, Lowe, Ashley, Gilmore, Amanda K., Khatiwada, Srijana, Kresnow, Marcie-jo
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container_issue
container_start_page 108839
container_title Drug and alcohol dependence
container_volume 226
creator Basile, Kathleen C.
Smith, Sharon G.
Liu, Yang
Lowe, Ashley
Gilmore, Amanda K.
Khatiwada, Srijana
Kresnow, Marcie-jo
description •This is a national study of substance-involved sexual violence victimization.•Victimization commonly occurs with substance use, by victims and perpetrators.•Alcohol is the most commonly used substance by both victims and perpetrators.•One in 3 alcohol/drug-facilitated rape victims reported involuntary substance use.•About 1 in 7 males who were made to penetrate reported involuntary substance use. The authors examine the prevalence and characteristics of sexual violence victimization - rape and being made to penetrate [MTP] (men only) - involving substances (alcohol or other drugs). Although it has been well-documented that perpetrators commit sexual violence against individuals who are using alcohol or drugs, more research is needed to describe the problem at a national level. Data are from the 2010–2012 National Intimate Partner and Sexual Violence Survey, a nationally representative random-digit-dial telephone survey of English- and Spanish-speaking adults in the United States (n = 41,174). Findings reveal that among victims of physically forced rape, 26.2 % of female and 30.0 % of male victims reported substance use; 44.5 % of male MTP victims reported substance use. The majority of forced rape and MTP victims reported the perpetrator was using alcohol or drugs. Among victims of alcohol/drug-facilitated rape, 29.7 % of female and 32.4 % of male victims reported involuntary use of substances, mostly drugs; 84.0 % of female and 82.6 % of male victims reported voluntary use. Among male victims of alcohol/drug-facilitated MTP, 14.6 % reported involuntary and 85.4 % reported voluntary use of substances. Female and male victims reported that the majority of intimate partner, acquaintance, and stranger perpetrators were using substances during the victimization. These findings suggest the importance of prevention efforts at the individual and community levels to reduce substance-involved sexual violence perpetration and risk reduction programs to reduce the likelihood of voluntary substance-facilitated sexual violence victimization.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.drugalcdep.2021.108839
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The authors examine the prevalence and characteristics of sexual violence victimization - rape and being made to penetrate [MTP] (men only) - involving substances (alcohol or other drugs). Although it has been well-documented that perpetrators commit sexual violence against individuals who are using alcohol or drugs, more research is needed to describe the problem at a national level. Data are from the 2010–2012 National Intimate Partner and Sexual Violence Survey, a nationally representative random-digit-dial telephone survey of English- and Spanish-speaking adults in the United States (n = 41,174). Findings reveal that among victims of physically forced rape, 26.2 % of female and 30.0 % of male victims reported substance use; 44.5 % of male MTP victims reported substance use. The majority of forced rape and MTP victims reported the perpetrator was using alcohol or drugs. Among victims of alcohol/drug-facilitated rape, 29.7 % of female and 32.4 % of male victims reported involuntary use of substances, mostly drugs; 84.0 % of female and 82.6 % of male victims reported voluntary use. Among male victims of alcohol/drug-facilitated MTP, 14.6 % reported involuntary and 85.4 % reported voluntary use of substances. Female and male victims reported that the majority of intimate partner, acquaintance, and stranger perpetrators were using substances during the victimization. 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source MEDLINE; Sociological Abstracts; Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); ScienceDirect Journals (5 years ago - present)
subjects Acquaintances
Adult
Aggression
Alcohol
Alcohol/drug-facilitated sexual violence
Alcoholism
Alcohols
Bullying
Crime Victims
Domestic violence
Drinking behavior
Drug use
Drugs
Female
Females
Humans
Intimate Partner Violence
Made to penetrate
Male
Males
Men
Perpetrators
Pharmaceutical Preparations
Polls & surveys
Prevalence
Prevention programs
Rape
Risk management
Risk reduction
Sex crimes
Sex Offenses
Sexual assault
Sexual Partners
Sexual violence
Substance abuse
Substance use
Telephone surveys
United States - epidemiology
Victimization
Victims
Victims of crime
Violence
Voluntariness
title Victim and perpetrator characteristics in alcohol/drug-involved sexual violence victimization in the U.S
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