Author:
HILL J.,DAVIS R.,BYATT M.,BURNSIDE E.,ROLLINSON L.,FEAR S.
Abstract
Background. Child sexual abuse (CSA) is associated, after controlling for other adversities, with a
range of non-psychotic disorders in adult life. There is a need to clarify whether CSA contributes
to risk of disorder in the absence of such adversities, and given that associations may be accounted
for by genetic mechanisms, whether they are seen where the perpetrator of CSA is not a biological
relative, and where there has been only one incident.Methods. A questionnaire-based study of a socio-economically representative sample of women age
25–36 (N = 862) was carried out. Parental care and control were assessed using the Parental
Bonding Instrument, and CSA using a previously validated questionnaire. Current affective
symptoms were assessed from the depression scale of the GHQ-28.Results. Low maternal and paternal care were associated with risk of abuse by a biologically
unrelated perpetrator before the age of 11, but not during early adolescence. Low maternal care and
CSA each made independent contributions to the prediction of affective symptoms. CSA by a non-
relative was strongly associated with GHQ depression, as was CSA by a non-relative that had
occurred only once.Conclusions. Quality of parental care probably influences risk of CSA by unrelated abusers in
younger children, while there may be a combination of genetic and parental influences on the risk
of abuse by a relative. The strong association of affective symptoms in adult life with CSA by a non-
relative suggests an environmental effect. Studies, utilizing genetic designs, of the role of childhood
trauma in relation to adult affective symptoms are needed.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,Applied Psychology
Cited by
54 articles.
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