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Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences
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Correlates of Sexual Abuse and Subsequent Risk Taking

Nancy L. Brown

Palo Alto Medical Foundation Research Institute, brownn{at}pamfri.org

Sandra R. Wilson

Palo Alto Medical Foundation Research Institute

Ya-Min Kao

Palo Alto Medical Foundation Research Institute

Verónica Luna

Palo Alto Medical Foundation Research Institute

Elena S. Kuo

Palo Alto Medical Foundation Research Institute

Claudette Rodriguez

Palo Alto Medical Foundation Research Institute

Philip W. Lavori

Stanford University

Correlates of sexual abuse among female participants in the California Latino Couples Study were examined in two sets of comparisons: (a) nonabused women versus women reporting any sexual abuse and (b) among sexually abused women, those reporting forced intercourse versus those with no forced intercourse. Women who reported any sexual abuse (n = 208) differed from women who reported no abuse (n = 363) in their age at first voluntary sexual intercourse, risk-taking scores, and sexually transmitted infection (STI) history. Among the abused women, those who experienced forced intercourse (n = 101) were more likely to report sexual intercourse with an injection drug user, a history of STIs, unhappy intimate relationships, depression, and elevated stress scores compared wth women who had been touched inappropriately but not forced to have sexual intercourse.

Key Words: sexual abuse • risk taking

Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences, Vol. 25, No. 3, 331-351 (2003)
DOI: 10.1177/0739986303257147


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